{"id":182473,"date":"2023-12-17T18:28:58","date_gmt":"2023-12-17T18:28:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/hotworldreport.com\/?p=182473"},"modified":"2023-12-17T18:28:58","modified_gmt":"2023-12-17T18:28:58","slug":"we-can-cause-you-grief-gattos-words-of-warning-to-construction-whistleblower","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/hotworldreport.com\/world-news\/we-can-cause-you-grief-gattos-words-of-warning-to-construction-whistleblower\/","title":{"rendered":"\u2018We can cause you grief\u2019: Gatto\u2019s words of warning to construction whistleblower"},"content":{"rendered":"
By <\/span>Nick McKenzie<\/span> and David Marin-Guzman<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/p>\n Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.<\/p>\n On October 5, underworld figure Mick Gatto offered an unsolicited proposition to veteran Melbourne architect Joseph Toscano.<\/p>\n Toscano was told he could sit down with the underworld figure to resolve the architect\u2019s commercial dispute with building company Cobolt Constructions, which Gatto claimed to be representing.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Joseph Toscano.<\/span><\/p>\n But if Toscano wasn\u2019t interested in this meeting, he could face trouble caused by the man infamously caught up in Melbourne\u2019s gangland wars.<\/p>\n \u201cWe can cause you grief,\u201d Gatto told Toscano. \u201cAnd I know you have enough grief in your life already.\u201d<\/p>\n Gatto hinted he was capable of preventing other building companies from completing Toscano\u2019s Melbourne inner-city apartment block development.<\/p>\n \u201cI can stop anyone doing anything, mate. And I say that respectfully, I don\u2019t want to be a smarty,\u201d he says in a record of the conversation.<\/p>\n It is often reported that Gatto is the last man standing from Melbourne\u2019s bloody gangland wars, but it is less well known he is still going strong in the face of repeated attempts from various authorities to curb his ubiquitous role in the construction industry.<\/p>\n Gatto has long cast a shadow over Melbourne\u2019s construction industry as a self-styled \u201cmediator and arbitrator\u201d, making the occasional entry into the NSW sector as well.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Mick Gatto in June 2022.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Quinn Rooney<\/cite><\/p>\n The fact he is still operating, along with the rare glimpse of how he plies his trade, illustrates how certain construction industry power structures have not only withstood repeated attempts at reform but continue to flourish.<\/p>\n According to Gatto, building companies call on him to sort out contractual or industrial disputes, while the construction union assists him.<\/p>\n \u201cI have got friends there [in the union] and they support me if things are done the right way,\u201d Gatto explained when asked last week about his intervention in Toscano\u2019s development dispute.<\/p>\n \u201cThere are plenty of people around like me who deal with the union and consult, but they are not as high-profile as me\u2026 they do it under the radar.\u201d<\/p>\n For 20 years, Coalition governments, commissions of inquiry, police taskforces and regulators have tried to bring Gatto undone. The hulking, grey haired ex-boxer has outlasted all of them.<\/p>\n The 2002 Cole royal commission exposed Gatto\u2019s role as an industry fixer (the commission aired allegations Gatto was either a standover man or an \u201cindustrial consultant\u201d).<\/p>\n That Coalition government-ordered commission led to the establishment of the Australian Building and Construction Commission, which the Albanese government abolished in February.<\/p>\n Anecdotally at least, problems are brewing in both Sydney and Melbourne. This masthead has spoken to a dozen industry and union insiders who describe how bikie gangs and Italian and Middle Eastern underworld figures are quietly entrenching themselves in the industry at a scale not seen in years. They would not speak openly over concern about the impact on their professional interests.<\/p>\n \u201cIt\u2019s worse now than ever,\u201d says one former union official who insists that when he served at the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union\u2019s construction arm, the union saw its role as keeping crooks at bay, at least ensuring they didn\u2019t rip off workers or compromise safety.<\/p>\n A former Building and Construction Commission official scoffs at this suggestion: \u201cGatto works hand in glove with some in the union. He couldn\u2019t exist without their support.\u201d<\/p>\n Still, it is building companies, not unions, that pay his fees, which can range from $50,000 to $1 million per dispute resolution, depending on the client and complexity of the issue.<\/p>\n Gatto told one developer recently that he mediates 10 construction industry disputes a week.<\/p>\n If Gatto is, as he insists, simply the most high-profile of a small army of industrial relations fixers, it raises old questions about an industry crucial to solving the housing crisis and delivering vital infrastructure projects.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Mick Gatto at Shane Warne\u2019s memorial service in March.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Getty Images<\/cite><\/p>\n Business records and sources reveal colourful industry players are working on federal or state government projects or have moved into Indigenous labour hire, which makes it easier for them to win contracts due to governments\u2019 social procurement rules.<\/p>\n Gatto is linked to labour hire entity M Group, which set up Indigenous firm Jarrah as part of a joint venture and has won work on several large Victorian projects with CFMEU backing.<\/p>\n Gatto\u2019s company Arbitration and Mediation Services was an original shareholder of the group before transferring those shares to his daughter.<\/p>\n Gatto is also paid to sort out the firm\u2019s union issues and has a CFMEU-endorsed industrial agreement, which is a de facto requirement for scoring work on CBD projects.<\/p>\n One of the reasons involvement of underworld figures in the construction industry remains hard to quantify and dissect is because so few working within the sector are willing to go on the record. Joseph Toscano is a rare exception.<\/p>\n Having weathered COVID lockdowns that removed his initial choice of firm, the veteran architect contracted Cobolt Constructions in 2021 to build a 10-storey apartment building in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Collingwood.<\/p>\n Their relationship soured over cost, time and quality issues, finally becoming irreparable in January.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The development site in Wellington Street, Collingwood.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Penny Stephens<\/cite><\/p>\n The question of who is to blame for this breakdown is mired in claim and counter-claim. Toscano and Cobolt\u2019s Christian Munn both called in lawyers after Munn suspended his company\u2019s services, leaving Toscano with a long list of complaints about Cobolt\u2019s performance and scrambling for a new builder.<\/p>\n Munn has accused Toscano\u2019s firm of acting unfairly and of owing Cobolt significant funds and materials.<\/p>\n What is undisputed is that in early October, Gatto, and his business partner John Khoury, arrived on the scene.<\/p>\n Gatto called Toscano twice, explaining on both occasions that he was \u201cringing on behalf of Cobolt\u201d and reciting some of the same contested complaints made separately by Munn (who claims to know nothing of Gatto\u2019s involvement).<\/p>\n If you are not interested, we will go away and whatever happens happens.<\/p>\n \u201cWe are trying to rectify these issues before they get stretched out along the way with lawyers and all that,\u201d Gatto told Toscano, according to a record of the conversation.<\/p>\n Communicating with a gruff politeness, Gatto warned Toscano he could cause him \u201cgrief\u201d and claimed he was capable of \u201cstopping\u201d the site\u2019s completion, while mentioning the name of the building company that Toscano hoped would finish his development.<\/p>\n According to a record of the conversation, Gatto also mentioned he had the union onside and that these connections could help get his development restarted.<\/p>\n Cobolt is a non-union-endorsed company that has been a target of the CFMEU over purported safety issues on its sites, while the company that is Toscano\u2019s preferred replacement has a union-endorsed employee agreement.<\/p>\n \u201cWe just want to sit down and have a chat and find a common denominator. If you are interested. And if you are not interested, we will go away and whatever happens happens,\u201d Gatto told Toscano.<\/p>\n A day after this call, on October 6, Gatto\u2019s business partner Khoury arrived at Toscano\u2019s site, seeking entry and the recovery of site materials that Cobolt claims are owned by it or its subcontractors.<\/p>\n Khoury provided the security guard with his business card and left without incident.<\/p>\n Khoury is a mostly genial businessman who has avoided the same fearsome reputation as Gatto but is a fixture of the old Carlton Crew.<\/p>\n The crew is a grouping of underworld figures who rose to prominence during the gangland wars between 1996 and 2011, a period in which several of Gatto\u2019s closest underworld friends were murdered and he shot dead hitman Andrew Veniamin in an act a jury accepted was self-defence.<\/p>\n Gatto despises public discussion of his underworld history, promoting himself as a grandfather devoted to charity (one of his grandchildren has autism and Gatto is devoted to fundraising for the cause).<\/p>\n In an at times testy interview, Gatto acknowledged he is called on in the construction industry because his reputation precedes him.<\/p>\n Asked why Cobolt or one of its subcontractors would hire him, Gatto explained: \u201cBecause they have tried every other way. They have tried legally, they have tried talking to him [Toscano], they know that I\u2019ve got a reputation in the industry like you said I had. And they call on me hoping that I can talk some sense into these people. You know the way it works.<\/p>\n \u201cWe don\u2019t stand over anyone. We don\u2019t belt anyone. We don\u2019t do the wrong thing by anyone. Fair enough, everyone ends up with a bad taste in their mouth, but we try to resolve things, quickly and amicably.\u201d<\/p>\n Since the interaction with Gatto, Toscano\u2019s efforts to restart his development have stalled, with builders privately claiming they have been warned off the job by unnamed figures in the CFMEU until the dispute is resolved.<\/p>\n A CFMEU spokesperson did not respond to questions. Toscano\u2019s son, Nick, an energy reporter with The Age<\/em> and Sydney Morning Herald<\/em>, advised his father to contact police about Gatto\u2019s approach, but while detectives were sympathetic, there is no evidence of illegality by Gatto or Khoury (Nick Toscano had no role in the preparation of this story).<\/p>\n Joseph Toscano believes that putting his experience into the open might help change his industry.<\/p>\n \u201cIt is scandalous that the building industry operates this way. It is not an environment for anyone to do business in. There are faceless men who have nothing to do with the business at hand who intervene in disputes \u2026 it is galling.\u201d<\/p>\n When called by this masthead, Cobolt\u2019s Munn claimed it was Toscano\u2019s conduct as developer that was the problem and insisted he had no knowledge of Gatto\u2019s involvement or why he was claiming to be working for Cobolt.<\/p>\n Munn suggested an errant subcontractor may be responsible for hiring the colourful mediator, but refused to say who.<\/p>\n Gatto denied he had the power to affect Toscano\u2019s apartment project.<\/p>\n \u201cI can\u2019t shut down a site in the city,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n The power to stop building works, Gatto insists, resides only with the union, and he says it is only exercised when workers are being ripped off.<\/p>\n Union politics aside, while there are building firms prepared to pay him, Gatto is going nowhere.<\/p>\n \u201cPrint the truth, I have no issue with you,\u201d he told this masthead, insisting his was a brief and uneventful interjection into Toscano\u2019s building project.<\/p>\n \u201cIf you don\u2019t print the truth, I have got a problem with you. And if I ever see you, I will deal with you.\u201d<\/p>\n Start<\/i><\/strong> the<\/strong> day with a summary of the day\u2019s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\nSave articles for later<\/h3>\n
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