Transport official boasts of ‘juicy meeting’ and pocketing ‘cash in brown paper bag’

Transport official boasts of ‘juicy meeting’ and pocketing ‘cash in brown paper bag’

Under questioning from ICAC counsel assisting Rob Ranken, SC, Helmy had trouble explaining his own spreadsheet, the formulas he had used and what he had recorded in it but confirmed that Capital Lines & Signs director Andrew Stewart never paid the full amount he believed he was owed under their arrangements.

Loading

Helmy had his first clandestine meeting with Stewart on May 19, 2020, when the contractor drove to his Merrylands house.

After that meeting, Helmy checked in with Le, telling him it was a “nice juicy meeting … and he likes me very much”.

Le responded: “Can he do cash?”

Helmy added: “Ohh yea cash in a brown paper bag he says lol.”

Four months later, Helmy received the first payment of $40,000 in cash from Stewart, which was for work the company carried out at inflated rates on the Lachlan Valley Way road near Yass.

Capital Lines & Signs director Andrew Stewart appears before the ICAC in July.

Capital Lines & Signs director Andrew Stewart appears before the ICAC in July.

The ICAC is investigating allegations Helmy was the mastermind behind corrupt relationships with nine companies that were paid at least $343 million in contracts by Transport for NSW. He is accused of pocketing $11.5 million in kickbacks – including bundles of cash and gold bullion – from the contractors in return for their being awarded the work on the state’s roads.

On Tuesday, Helmy frequently failed to recall meeting Stewart to receive cash until he was shown WhatsApp exchanges he had with Le.

In a WhatsApp message on December 17, 2020, Helmy told Le that he would be meeting Stewart the following week, adding: “So you’re gona [sic] be richer again.”

Loading

The inquiry heard that Helmy ended up meeting Stewart near Bowral on Christmas Eve 2020 to receive $44,000 from him but that he later told Le he received only $30,000. It was the second of eight cash payments that Helmy is alleged to have received from Stewart totalling $604,000 between 2020 and early last year.

Pressed on what he did with the $604,000 he had received, Helmy confirmed that he arranged to meet people via the messaging app Telegram to exchange cash for a form of cryptocurrency known as meme coins. “I bought different new coins. There was a cat coin. They call them meme coins,” he told the hearing. “There was a Metaverse coin.”

Stewart has previously told the inquiry that Helmy pressed him to pay in cryptocurrency, and that the-then Transport official also wanted him to buy him a yellow Mercedes-Benz CLA45-S class car and put it in his sister’s name.

After four months on the run from police, Helmy was discovered by detectives hiding in a cupboard in a unit in south-western Sydney on September 26. He remains in custody apart from his appearances at the ICAC inquiry.

He will return to the witness box on Wednesday.

Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *