People considering voting for 3P tomorrow should read this. Buyer beware!
Italian Connection comes under scrutiny
Kate McClymont and Jacquelin Magnay | July 4, 2009
Kate McClymont and Jacquelin Magnay trace a tangled web of failed property deals that all lead back to Eels chairman Roy Spagnolo.
Despite having a multimillion-dollar property empire, the Parramatta Leagues Club chairman, Roy Spagnolo, has had an extraordinary run of bad luck, with a string of his property development companies failing, leaving debts including more than $1 million to the Tax Office.
Among Spagnolo's more colourful business partners are a man jailed for insurance fraud and one named by the Woodward royal commission as a money launderer for the Griffith Mafia, while another was convicted for assaulting a photographer at the funeral of the Griffith drug boss Robert Trimbole.
A Herald investigation has uncovered at least eight property development companies in which Spagnolo has been involved that have gone into liquidation, which could put in jeopardy Spagnolo's continued association with the Parramatta Leagues Club and the Parramatta National Rugby League club.
Spagnolo is such an avid Eels fan his car sports the numberplate "Parra" and years ago he called one of his personal trusts "The Eels trust." The 54-year-old accountant was initially introduced to the Eels' dressing room inner sanctum by the former Parramatta manager Tony Zappia around 2000.
The now-disgraced Zappia and his accountant Spagnolo were often joined by property developers Vince Lombardo and George Gaitanos. The group became known as the "Italian Connection" and regularly wined and dined the Eels players.
Long lunches were held at Spagnolo's sprawling residence in Horsley Park. Whenever the Eels play the Brisbane Broncos, the team has dinner and post-match drinks at St Pauls Tavern in Spring Hill - owned by Lombardo. Pre-season trial games in Griffith see the team lunching at the Westend Winery, part-owned by Spagnolo.
Up until being made chairman earlier this year in a well- publicised election coup, Spagnolo was also the manager of two Eels players, Fui Fui Moi Moi and Luke Burt, and was an adviser to Eric Grothe junior.
While Spagnolo boasts of an astonishing property empire, over the years many of the companies he has been associated with have gone down the gurgler, often leaving both Spagnolo and the Tax Office out of pocket. Under the Corporations Act, a person may be banned from being a company director for up to seven years if two or more of the companies in which they are an officebearer fail or if the company fails within 12 months after the person has left.
Spagnolo was a director of Westside Property Developments which went into voluntary liquidation. In at least one other company, Spagnolo resigned three months before the company collapsing. In the other failed companies Spagnolo was replaced as a director by relatives, employees or business associates.
The pattern in the failed companies is remarkable. The same liquidator is appointed, the same people are left out of pocket - usually the Australian Taxation Office, Spagnolo and his friends and relatives. And the same person, Xavier Lo, turns up controlling the proxies at the creditors' meeting.
Lo happens to be an employee at Spagnolo's Fairfield accountancy firm Spagnolo and Associates. Lo was a director of the controversial fund Beyond Sharks Foundation secretly set up by the disgraced former Cronulla Sharks boss Zappia.
One of the property development companies Spagnolo has been involved in was Wavey, which spent almost $2 million buying industrial land in Mascot. In 2002 Spagnolo and his business partner Frank Carioti were replaced as directors by Spagnolo's client Giuseppe Barbaro, a baker from Hall Place, Fairfield West. Barbaro, a relative of Trimbole, was convicted of assaulting a photographer at Trimbole's funeral in 1987.
A year after Barbaro took over the company, it went belly-up owing $64,000. Creditors included the Tax Office, owed $57,000, and the law firm of Patrick Agostino (Spagnolo's brother-in-law), owed almost $1000. Barbaro himself was owed $1750 and Spagnolo's company $3300. Peter Ngan was appointed liquidator.
Agostino has suffered a similar misfortune. Ngan liquidated his company Pasad, which collapsed in 2002 owing the Tax Office $295,000 and his brother-in-law's company Spagnolo and Associates was owed $3000.
Ngan was also appointed liquidator when Westside Property Developments went down in 2002, one of the shareholders of which was the controversial Labor minister Joe Tripodi. The directors at the time included Spagnolo and Pasquale Sergi. Born in Plati, Italy, in 1944, Sergi was named in the Woodward royal commission into Drug Trafficking as a money launderer for the Trimbole crime syndicate.
The royal commission found that Sergi, a real estate agent, was involved with Trimbole in the purchase of properties in Sydney's west which was "undoubtedly a money-washing operation" to launder funds improperly obtained from Griffith drug crops.
Both Sergi and Spagnolo were singled out for praise in Tripodi's maiden speech to Parliament.
Another Spagnolo company, Sinister, also failed within months of Spagnolo leaving. After completing the sale of land in Fairfield for $8million, Spagnolo was replaced by his long-term business partner Frank Carioti and his wife Maria. Ngan was appointed liquidator and Spagnolo's employee Lo turned up on behalf of the creditors which were Carioti's family trust and his boss Spagnolo's family trust. The two trusts claimed to be owed $200,000. A smaller creditor was Spagnolo's brother-in-law Agostino who was owed $5000.
Three months after he left, another of Spagnolo's companies, Ispa, went into liquidation, owing the Tax Office $339,000.
As well as being a proxy for creditors in the various collapsed companies, Lo had his own misfortune when his company Fairfield Investment Corporation went belly-up in 2004. Among the unsecured creditors were the Tax Office ($36,002) and his boss Roy Spagnolo and Associates, owed $5500. Lo, who had his application to be a licensed auditor rejected by ASIC, continues to work for Spagnolo despite being involved in one of his boss's most spectacular failures which left Lo's company Secured Capital out of pocket to the tune of $19 million.
Sine Two, owned by Spagnolo and Frank Carioti, went into liquidation in 2007 owing in excess of $21 million.
Only a month before his appointment as Sine Two's liquidator, Richard Albarran had refused to answer 37 questions put to him in a disciplinary hearing in relation to his administration of a company unrelated to the Spagnolo group. He was subsequently suspended for nine months.
Unlike other creditors' meetings involving Spagnolo-associated companies, Lo did not control all the proxies in the Sine Two creditors' meeting. According to ASIC documents, Robert Fielding representing Cavasinni Constructions, owed $1.877 million, asked some serious questions such as how Sine Two, a company "with $1 of capital worth" could have obtained such large secured loans. The minutes show that Albarran stated that "he is unaware of how these loans came about and added that it could just be that the directors were wealthy individuals".
Fielding also wanted to know if there was any relationship between Lo, Spagnolo and Carioti. Albarran is reported as saying "he is not aware of any other prior relationships".
The minutes show that Spagnolo and Lo did not volunteer the fact that Lo worked at Spagnolo's accountancy firm. Fielding also received no joy when he inquired as to where Lo's company received its funds in order to loan $19 million.
Also owed money when Sine Two went into liquidation were Spagnolo's brother-in-law, Agostino. He was owed $24,200. Other companies connected to Spagnolo were owed $200,000.
Yet another company of Spagnolo's, Nearov, also went down the tube owing creditors $64,000. Curiously, on the ASIC form signed by Spagnolo, a different birthdate and home address appear.
Although Spagnolo had resigned as a director before liquidator Ngan was appointed, Spagnolo's replacement director was Michelle Douglas, an employee at his firm. She also appeared with Lo as a director on the Beyond Sharks Foundation. Creditors to Nearov include Infac Finance, which later also went into liquidation with Ngan as the liquidator. One of the directors of Infac was Chris Crawley. In 2001 he helped Spagnolo save Club Marconi from entering receivership.
Crawley, 49 from Winmalee, owned the successful racehorse Excellerator along with Agostino, as well as racing identities Tony and Frank Mittiga. A relative of the racing Mittigas, Roy Mittiga, is another friend of Spagnolo. Roy Mittiga went to jail in 1992 over a vehicle insurance fraud.
Replies
Now I understand why Spagnolo has the Grothes running on his ticket. This is all making more and more sense and further shows why we need a new Board.
Jimmy I would just like to highlight for some that may still be confused that 3P is now rebranded and are calling themselves Parra4Ever. Roy has noticebly been very quiet and has distanced himself from the campaign as not to draw all his negative attention to it by letting Eric Grothe Junior and Ray Price do all the talking.
Maybe we should kick out all the Italians and replace them with bogans:.............
Gee Jimmy, you've dropped me in it. I've just had two phone calls relaying demands that this post be removed immediately and all kinds of threats and accusations that ParraFirst is fighting a dirty campaign.
Just to explain to people to those who may not understand how social media works. This is a forum and it allows for Parramatta supporters to post they're thoughts and share information that feel is pertinent to our club. We have a code of conduct and if any piece is defamatory or contravenes the code of conduct it is reviewed for removal. Can I ask that if anyone feels that the above article is defamatory that contact Fairfax. Here is their web address where you can find contact details: http://fairfaxmedia.com.au/. I'll also point out I've never met Jimmy but he is generally considered to be a very authoritative and fair contributor to this site.
If the community however feels that this article should not be kept live for whatever reason, please express that feeling below, and I'll remove the piece.
I'm a little disappointed that they didn't mention mine Phil :(
So how is it your fault Phil for allowing a member on your site to bring to our attention a piece published in the media?
As you say - as long as the article does not contravene the terms and conditions of conduct on this site then let it flow.
Why would people want this squashed unless they have something to hide?
The newspaper has raised a legitimate question as to the legal eligibility of our chairman to remain in office.
This is a newspaper item - not a figment of Jimmy's imagination - all actions should be directed to the newspaper in question.
remove it or i'll make you an offer you can't refuse ......
Unlike most other journalists that report on Rugbly League. Kate Mcclymont is an investigative journalist who writes articles after gathering evidence to support her claims. Now if there are people unhappy with what has been written in 2009 - Yes thats right 2009 why didn't they do something about it then. I mean fair go Kate has written an article that 3.5 years later is yet to be disproved based on research and evidence. And that is labelled dirty? Yet they have Junior who must be getting RSI in his thumbs for tweeting away allegation after allegation with no merit and thats OK. Anyway in the wise words of Steve Sharps collegue who sent out a letter based on falsehoods about ParraFirst-"It's just Politics."
LOL, This is exactly what i was referring to when people decided to have a crack at PARRAFIRST for having spoken with Dennis Fitzgerald.
Anybody in the know Realises the circles that a member of 3P (Parra4ever) mix in, you dont have to do to much research to get an idea of Spagnolos business past, this article is a prime example of the way our club is viewed.
I suggest every body read the above article well to get an understanding of how our club is being run as a leopard does not change its spots.
Is this the man you want running our club?
Id rather have Bernie Madolf running our club than this bloke...
The above dealings and many more that im aware of regarding Spagnolo are the exact reasons we are a rabble, how can anybody put any trust of faith in a man like this.
Honest? I'll leave it to you to decide, just read the article above.......
hello..............phil????...............You ok ??????
if you dont respond in the next 30 mins, im calling the police