Anti-corruption investigators have raided the home of a high-ranking Australian Federal Police officer.
The respected federal police veteran was suspended on Thursday after internal affairs officers searched his Canberra home.
Official sources, speaking anonymously to discuss confidential information, said the raid was prompted by allegations linked to a conflict of interest involving procurement decisions.
The federal police declined to say why the officer’s home was raided, stressing that “the AFP does not comment on internal processes relating to individual members”.
“Natural justice applies to AFP members. No further comment will be made at this time,” an AFP spokesperson said.
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Word of the search of the officer’s home and his standing down spread rapidly across the Canberra law enforcement and national security community on Friday, but the AFP’s professional standards division also refused to divulge details of the allegations.
Since its inception last July, the National Anti-Corruption Commission has prioritised investigations targeting conflicts of interest involving government procurement.
There is no indication the NACC is involved directly in the raids, suggesting that the alleged misconduct of the commander does not rise to the level of serious corruption.