- Send the Rohingya child sex predator to the US which resulted in the release of dozens of criminals.
- The ruling opened the door for the release of at least 141 prisoners.
- The government would probably prevail in the case that seems to be called into doubt based on emails between officials.
Labor’s claims that it was taken aback by the ruling are called into question by covert plans to send the Rohingya child sex predator to the United States, which set off the High Court precedent that resulted in the release of dozens of criminals.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neill has insisted that she advised the Commonwealth to win the case, but when it didn’t, the ruling opened the door for the release of at least 141 prisoners, including pedophiles and murderers, onto Australian soil.
Resettle Rohingya
The documents obtained by Sky News Australia cast doubt on the Commonwealth’s belief in the efforts to resettle NZYQ, a Rohingya man, in the United States.
The Home Affairs Minister’s claims that the government would probably prevail in the case seem to be called into doubt based on emails exchanged between department officials in the Home Affairs division.
Although the emails submitted to the Home Court reveal the Home Affairs department was in contact with the Australian embassy in the US and requesting that they urge the State Department to resettle the detainee, the Minister of Home Affairs had earlier claimed that the department knew it was likely that the Commonwealth would win the case.