{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/68e5f8be496725079e7383b1/68fe90441e3d261ce096e8a2?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"EP 4: The Men Who Kept the Books","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/68e5f8be496725079e7383b1/1761513114828-7c7fa18e-1231-4945-9494-92304865e8c5.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>In Griffith, the books always balanced—even when nothing else did. Episode 4 follows the quiet figures who kept the region’s financial world running: a discreet accountant known only as <em>Mr. G</em>, and a young parish priest whose ledgers recorded donations no collection plate could explain. Their handwriting threaded through farms, co-ops, churches and political offices, mapping a silent economy that shifted cash from the Riverina to Sydney and, eventually, Canberra.</p><p>Drawing from sworn evidence, financial records and contemporary reporting, this episode uncovers how ordinary accounting practices became the perfect language for extraordinary secrecy. Brown envelopes, blue-linen ledgers, vanished parish pages, and political “adjustments” formed a system where money entered clean channels and disappeared within weeks. No crimes proven—just patterns too precise to ignore.</p><p>As investigators probed unexplained wealth, requests were dismissed as “out of scope,” and evidence quietly slipped through institutional cracks. What remained were traces: an initial in a commission appendix, missing microfilm, a priest’s private crisis of faith, and a ledger that briefly surfaced in Sydney before vanishing into the country’s political bloodstream.</p><p>This is the story of the men who balanced the books—and what their numbers reveal about the cost of silence.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><strong>Credits</strong></p><p><br></p><p>Written &amp; Produced by <strong>Stephen Johns</strong></p><p>Sound Design &amp; Editing by <strong>Stephen Johns</strong></p><p>Archival Research by <strong>Alex G</strong></p><p>Archival audio excerpts courtesy of <strong>ABC News</strong>.</p><p>Used under Australian fair dealing provisions for <strong>news, reporting, and public interest analysis</strong>.</p><p>© <strong>Compromised Podcast Series</strong>. All rights reserved.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Music licensed via Uppbeat:</strong></p><ul><li><em>Like a River</em> — Danijel Zambo</li><li>License: ZBUR1HQGWB9QNF8D</li><li><em>Blur</em> — Goods Cargo</li><li>License: QW3FGXP3VW0ZPYCW</li><li><em>Endless Puzzle</em> — AVBE</li><li>License: 6G9BN3TRTYTCDBRL</li><li><em>Spring Coming</em> — Enrique Molano</li><li>License: TMQZ5W2MAANQTUGE</li><li><em>A New Chapter</em> — Luminbird</li><li>License: IE7ZTC8BRCGTDDAF</li><li><em>Don’t Let Go</em> — Apex Music</li><li>License: CYOGRURAAB6M03TF</li><li><em>Intriguing Case</em> — Matt Stewart-Evans</li><li>License: HFKUUE2XUQGLQBFL</li><li><em>Underworld</em> — Revo</li><li>License: ZGYJAN3ID11LOG67</li><li><em>Maytan Risunchis</em> — Arnito</li><li>License: KRW17THKJYCGKOTT</li><li><em>Electromagnetic Interference</em> — Adi Goldstein</li><li>License: 9VP5CGTC8PWXRZFO</li><li><em>News You Can Trust</em> — Soundroll</li><li>License: MQ40T11AHMNQUXCW</li><li><em>The Heart of Silence</em> — Arnito</li><li>License: L3CQPJASUHTDSRKI</li><li><em>Two Worlds</em> — Tatami</li><li>License: IRYXNADNBHVFFQ8J</li></ul><p><br></p>","author_name":"Stephen Johns"}