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Dog fight: colourful candidates line up to run wealthy Bulldogs' club

Vee

First Grade
Messages
5,162
You couldn't make this shit up.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/na...un-wealthy-bulldogs-club-20180315-p4z4k2.html

A former bankrupt currently serving a six-year ban from junior rugby league, a man banned for life by the Office of Fair Trading and Gary McIntyre, the architect of the infamous Bulldogs salary cap scandal, are just some of the colourful candidates battling to control the rivers of gold which flow from Canterbury Bankstown Rugby League Club.

On Friday voting opens for candidates who are vying for seven positions on the leagues club board, which generates revenue of $74 million per year from gaming alone.

It is the leagues club which provides the financial muscle to the football club, which runs the Bulldogs’ football team. But in reality it is the football club which controls the leagues club as it gets to appoint four people directly to the board. Effectively, this means that only three positions remain for the members of the leagues club to vote for.

One of the most colourful candidates is Elias (Lou) Boutros who was banned for life from operating as a motor dealer after the Office of Fair Trading found he had wound back the odometers on cars he was trying to sell. “Odometers of 21 cars were wound back by 1.46 million kms,” recorded Fair Trading in its 2003 annual report.

Only last month a rebel team led by Lynne Anderson, daughter of the late Bulldog’s patriarch Peter “Bullfrog” Moore, swept to power securing six of the seven positions on the football club board.

Club legend Steve Mortimer, loyal to the old guard led by former chairman Ray Dib, was the only non-rebel member to be re-elected to the football club board. Mr Mortimer, a current member of the league club board, is one of those facing the voters on the weekend after the new board declined to nominate him for one of the four guaranteed positions on the league club.

Instead, one of those they have chosen is James Marroun, a former bankrupt who is currently banned from any involvement in junior rugby league.

Under the NRL's national code of conduct, Mr Marroun, known as Gabby, was banned in 2014 from holding any official role after an ugly incident where he aggressively abused the referee presiding over a junior league match at Begnell Oval in Belfield. According to the complaint, Mr Marroun also threatened a 14-year-old opposition player saying, “I am going to make sure you get fixed up.”

“What happened back in 2014, on that day, I was no saint. But it didn’t deserve a six-year suspension, it was a one or two-week suspension at most. That’s my opinion,” Mr Marroun said.

A Fairfax Media investigation can also reveal that Mr Marroun, a former carpenter and builder, was bankrupted in 2009. According to this bankruptcy records, Mr Marroun is also known as Jabbour and Gabby.

In 2011 his bankruptcy was extended for a further three years after he failed to provide his bankruptcy trustee with information about his property interests and income. He was discharged from bankruptcy in 2015.

“I didn’t flee the country, I didn’t do a [Salim] Mehajer, I was in the trenches for a long time,” said Mr Marroun of his bankruptcy.

He said he had “learned a lot from the experience” and now has a national recruitment business which has contracts with organisations such as ANZ Stadium and The Star casino.

He also has $30,000 sponsorships with both the Bulldogs and West Tigers.

Mr Marroun, 39, is currently involved in property development with Bulldogs player Michael Lichaa and Josh Reynolds, who left the Bulldogs for West Tigers. Mr Marroun’s wife Enass is a director of MGJ Developments with the two footballers.

Controversially, Mrs Anderson and her husband Chris, a former successful coach with the club, are backing the return of Gary McIntyre, who has the number one position on the ticket.

Mr McIntyre was the driving force behind the club’s salary cap scandal which say the premiership favourites relegated to last place after Fairfax Media exposed his involvement in making secret payments to players.

Not only was the club fined $500,000, it also lost close to $5 million in legal fees, settlement with the Australian Tax Office and penalty payments to Liquor and Gaming.

Although the position on the leagues club board did not attract a salary, the Herald revealed he and his family had collected close to a million dollars as Mr McIntyre, a suburban lawyer, was charging the football club hefty legal fees. His wife Christine was employed by the league club in administration, his son-in-law was head of maintenance, and his son David was the financial director of the entity behind the controversial Oasis development, a joint project between the Liverpool Council and the Bulldogs.

In his pitch to “make the Bulldogs great again,” Mr McIntyre spoke of this “great relationship” with Lynne and Chris Anderson.

He said he was also “fuelled with enthusiasm by the return of his previous CEO John Ballesty.” Mr Ballesty, who has previously admitted he was aware of the scheme to breach the salary cap, was recently elected to the football club board and is one of the four nominated to the league club board.

Evidence of just how divisive the battle for control of the family-oriented club can be seen by George and Arthur Coorey, both current league club directors, are on the tickets of rival camps. George is on Mr McIntyre’s ticket while his brother is on the ticket of Mr Mortimer and Dr George Peponis.

Both Coorey brothers have been close associates of the now jailed former Labor minister Eddie Obeid.

In his character reference for Obeid at his sentencing, George Coorey spoke of his astonishment that Obeid had been found guilty "knowing his personal qualities and character".

Arthur Coorey was a central witness at a 2002 ICAC inquiry, which examined whether Mr Coorey, at the time a Bulldogs director, had been used by his friend Obeid as a go-between to have Mr McInytre, through the league club, pay the state ALP a $1 million bribe to win the government's approval for the struggling Oasis project.

This suggestion was hotly denied in the witness box by Mr Coorey, who described it as a "horrible lie".

Mr Coorey, Mr McIntyre and Obeid were cleared of any wrongdoing.

Meanwhile, Anthony Lahood, brother in law of Arthur Coorey and a major supplier of meat to the club, will face Lithgow court next month charged with stealing cattle.
 

Vee

First Grade
Messages
5,162
The gift that keeps on giving.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sp...re-as-tensions-boil-over-20180317-p4z4vk.html

Dog fight: Security separate Dib and McIntyre as tensions boil over

The Bulldogs’ deposed chairman Ray Dib and its former chief executive Gary McIntyre had to be separated by security after a raging argument inside Canterbury League Club as tensions over the weekend elections reached boiling point on Saturday.

Shocked onlookers told Fairfax Media several security staff rushed to ensure the row, where two of the Bulldogs’ most influential powerbrokers of the last two decades butted heads, didn’t escalate. It’s understood police were not involved in the McIntyre-Dib incident. Dib, who was dumped from the football club board in last month’s highly-charged elections by a Lynne Anderson-led Reform ticket, had entered Canterbury League Club to vote. He is not running for re-election as a director of the League Club.

Dib is understood to have left the Canterbury League Club precinct shortly after the flashpoint with McIntyre, who is angling for a return to the board after being painted as the architect of the Bulldogs’ salary cap scandal in 2002 in which the club was fined $500,000 and docked 37 competition points.

‘‘[Dib] was standing in the balloting area and I spoke to security that he shouldn’t be in that area, then he came over and stuck his face in front of me,’’ McIntyre told Fairfax Media. ‘‘Security was called and that was about it.’’

Dib has lent his support to a ticket including George Peponis, Steve Mortimer and Arthur Coorey as they seek the three vacant positions on the Canterbury League Club board.

Asked about the McIntyre incident, Dib told Fairfax Media: ‘‘He came up to me in a threatening and bullying way in an area where nominees were not supposed to be.’’

It was the low point of another day of drama for the Bulldogs, with Anderson, who has endorsed McIntyre’s return to the Bulldogs fold, and incumbent Canterbury League Club boss Peponis, who publicly campaigned for Dib’s re-election to the football club board, remaining at loggerheads.

Anderson said she has taken legal advice on whether the appointment of former NSW Premier Morris Iemma and UBS managing director George Kanaan as independents to the Canterbury League Club board earlier this week was binding, a tactic designed to stop the football club bosses from gaining control of the League Club finances.

[Dib] ... came over and stuck his face in front of me and threatened me.
Gary McIntyre

The football club board is able to appoint four of the seven directors to the Canterbury League Club board, but could potentially lose a majority under an expanded nine-person committee featuring Iemma and Kanaan.

Anderson described it as a ‘‘great betrayal of the football club’’.

‘‘We believe the appointment of the two additional directors, without a constitutional amendment with members approval, is illegal but we are seeking legal advice on the matter and we will deal with that matter in due course,’’ Anderson said in a statement on Saturday.

Fairfax Media understands a section of the Canterbury League Club members are rallying to call an Extraordinary General Meeting in the coming weeks to remove Iemma and Kanaan.

Peponis was quick to respond to Anderson questioning the validity of the appointments of Iemma and Kanaan. In a statement, Peponis said: ‘‘Contrary to the media release put out [by Anderson], the constitution at the League Club was changed in 1991 by the board at the time, led by Gary McIntyre, and this would not be the first time in history that the football club did not have a majority.’’

Results of the leagues club elections are due to be known on Monday.
 

Vee

First Grade
Messages
5,162
Roy Masters' take on it.

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sp...idens-after-day-of-barbs-20180317-p4z4um.html

The Bulldogs risk remaining a divided club following a pre-election coup where Canterbury Leagues Club president Dr George Peponis and his close ally, Ray Dib, voted to appoint two independent directors to the board, ending the historic balance of power the football club had over the rich licensed club.

Should the two independent directors, former NSW Premier Morris Iemma and investment banker George Kanaan vote with a successful ticket of Dr Peponis, Steve Mortimer and long-term director Arthur Coorey for the three remaining elected positions on the board, they will dominate the four nominees from the recent football club elections.

Such a scenario could widen the chasm between the faction led by Dr Peponis and Dib, the deposed chair of the football club and his successor, Lynne Anderson, daughter of the late Peter ‘‘Bullfrog’’ Moore and wife of Canterbury premiership coach Chris Anderson.

In a press release exhorting members to vote before the close of polling at 8pm Saturday, Lynne Anderson said the domination of the Leagues club board by her opponents could mean the Bulldogs NRL team ‘‘loses the funding it seeks to participate in the NRL premiership.’’

While this could be perceived as scaremongering, the Canterbury Leagues club subsidises the football club to upwards of $8 million a year.

The timing of the Thursday evening board meeting, on the eve of two days of voting for the Canterbury Leagues Club board and held only a couple of weeks after Dib lost the presidency of the football club, raises questions whether it was a desperate attempt to retain control.

Adding to the confusion was Friday night’s Bulldogs versus Roosters match, positioned in the middle of the two days of voting.

Many supporters, alarmed at the 30-12 loss, may have already voted, oblivious to the constitutional change and assuming the Anderson-led football board would resurrect the Bulldogs fortunes on the field.

Recently elected football club director and former Leagues Club general manager John Ballesty echoed Lynne Anderson’s ‘‘Great Betrayal’’ press release, saying, ‘‘This is a total betrayal of the football club and its role as the responsible entity providing four endorsed representatives to the board of the leagues club.

‘‘At the recent football club elections, Lynne Anderson’s ticket won six of the seven places on the football club board but at the League club meeting on Thursday night, the directors, led by Dr Peponis and Ray Dib took that control away by altering the constitution with the appointment of two extra directors to the League Club board. So, the football club could potentially be out-voted 5 to 4.’’

However, Dr Peponis and his licensed club board had every right, under the constitution to appoint two independent directors and secondly, Iemma – a long standing Dragons supporter – and Kanaan, managing director of UBS, are entitled, as independents, to vote with the football club directors.

In a statement released last night, Dr Peponis said: ‘‘Clubs NSW undertook a governance review in 2017 and one of the recommendations coming out of that review was that boards should focus on encouraging diversity amongst directors.

‘‘Clubs NSW went on to recommend the appointment of two independent directors as a means of achieving such diversity. This ensures good governance and is becoming accepted practice. Both government and Clubs NSW have recommended this practice.

‘‘Furthermore, we have received legal advice to confirm that what we are doing is perfectly legal.

‘‘The two directors we have appointed possess qualifications, which are unquestionable.’’

Ballesty, who is one of the football club’s four nominees to the league club, is alarmed at the both the ramifications for the football club and the future of the licensed club. ‘‘The Bulldogs will no longer have control of the financial future of the club,’’ he said.

Mortimer, a premiership captain and the only director not on the Anderson ticket elected to the football club board, did not respond to a request for comment.

In a statement released last night, Dr Peponis said: ‘‘Clubs NSW undertook a governance review in 2017 and one of the recommendations coming out of that review was that boards should focus on encouraging diversity amongst directors.

‘‘Clubs NSW went on to recommend the appointment of two independent directors as a means of achieving such diversity. This ensures good governance and is becoming accepted practice. Both government and Clubs NSW have recommended this practice.

‘‘Furthermore, we have received legal advice to confirm that what we are doing is perfectly legal.

‘‘The two directors we have appointed possess qualifications, which are unquestionable.’’

Ballesty, who is one of the football club’s four nominees to the league club, is alarmed at the both the ramifications for the football club and the future of the licensed club. ‘‘The Bulldogs will no longer have control of the financial future of the club,’’ he said.

Mortimer, a premiership captain and the only director not on the Anderson ticket elected to the football club board, did not respond to a request for comment.
 

coolsteve

Juniors
Messages
1,555
`when I saw headlines `Dib and McIntyre had security separate them`` I thought who is Billy Dib fighting now?
 

veggiepatch1959

First Grade
Messages
9,841
Funny how all three articles come from the Brisbane Times. Has any other newspapers published something similar? A Queensland newspaper reporting on a Sydney club?

Something fishy going on here.
 

Iafeta

Referee
Messages
24,357
Talkin Bulldogs, make sure you drop that G, folks, will be interesting on Monday.












Actually no it won't.
 

Vee

First Grade
Messages
5,162
The OP wins the honour of having the three longest consecutive posts in the history of League Unlimited.

Congratulations.....
Thanks very much.

Yeah, a lot of reading but I thought it was all pretty interesting, especially the OP, that's LOL gold..
 
Last edited:

Vee

First Grade
Messages
5,162
Funny how all three articles come from the Brisbane Times. Has any other newspapers published something similar? A Queensland newspaper reporting on a Sydney club?

Something fishy going on here.
BT normally has the same articles as the SMH but I occasionally see something in the SMH that doesn't make the cut in Qld. The OP came from my email from BT League HQ, then I saw the others online.
 
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