Chapter 8 2019

Last Chapter the so-called Guringai Tribal Link Aboriginal Corporation Directors pulled the plug on their ambitious land grab, but attempt to spin an embarrassing public failure to perpetuate further fraud into an injustice against them. Laurie continued to blow smoke, went psychedelic and can now like hear Ancestors like all the time man. This group manage to get another self-published venture off the ground.

31/05/2019

01/07/2019

Not content with Guringai Tribal Link, Guringai Link Aboriginal Corporation, Awabakal and Guringai Pty Ltd, Guringai Tours, Guringai Tours Pty Ltd, and Wannangini Pty Ltd, and Warren Whitfield’s now defunct Fire Stick Tours http://www.firesticktours.com.au, 1st of July 2019 Wannangini Pty Ltd sees registered with ASIC.

The website of Wannagini Pty Ltd lists as it’s Directors Tracey Howie, Kerri Brauer, and Peter Levin, and this is confirmed through ASIC Records.

Further ASIC documents show that as far as the Australian Securities and Investments Commission is due to review this corporation on 1/07/2023, which may prove interesting.

The homepage of new variant of ‘Guringai Tribal Link‘ offers a different perspective on this groups Aboriginal association, stating that the group are “Descendants of tradtional (sic) people.”

It is worth noting that both this new organization, so-called Guringai Tours, and the recently registered AWABAKAL AND GURINGAI PTY LTD are not registered as Aboriginal enterprises. I would be interested in an explanation for this from the Directors of these various intertwined pseudo-Aboriginal Corporate entities, if they could be trusted to give a response not already crafted by Warren Whitfield.

11/09/2019

Needless to say, Tracey-Lee from Cronulla is not

  • this Country.
  • the grains of sand on the beach.
  • the rocks, the lakes, the ocean.
  • the trees, the stars that glisten & the sun that shines upon us all.
  • the lore here;

30/11/2019

December 2019 saw the Koori Mail publish the following full page article:

The article details how the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council (MLALC) in NSW had been urging people to cease misapplying the name Guringai.

MLALC chief executive went further, saying “the Land Council is aware of
a number of individuals who identify as Guringai and claim to
be traditional owners of Northern Sydney. “This is a fallacy,” Mr Moran said, “and totally disrespects the required process to qualify for traditional ownership under the respective NSW Aboriginal Land Rights Act and Commonwealth Native Title Act.”

The next mention of Guringai Tribal Link members was in the Federal Court case of

Mace v State of Queensland [2019] FCAFC 233, which sheds more light on the circumstances surrounding the previously abandoned Awabakal and Guringai people’s native title claim.

The Court was satisfied that the people who comprised the Awabakal and Guringai applicant elected to discontinue their native title claim in June 2017. They did so at a time when they were legally represented, and on express notice that Darkinjung had filed a non-claimant application over an area within the external boundary of the Awabakal and Guringai People’s claim.

The Court was satisfied that Darkinjung had discharged its burden of proof that no native title existed in the land and waters covered by the non-claimant application.

Tags:

Leave a comment