top of page

Why Treasury Will Pay — And Why They Can’t Run Anymore


The Australian Treasury isn’t just managing budgets. It’s managing damage — and now, they’re managing me.


Let’s get one thing clear: the Treasury runs the Australian National Contact Point (AusNCP), the body responsible for handling corporate misconduct under OECD Guidelines. When I submitted my complaint about TCDD exposure, inherited harm, and systemic denial — they didn’t dismiss it. They escalated it. Internationally.


Germany and the United States are now involved because the manufacturers of Agent Orange are headquartered there. That escalation didn’t come from a lawyer. It came from me. And Treasury knows it.


So what happens when the department responsible for financial oversight, responsible business conduct, and international treaties is caught in a global web of evidence, annexes, and escalating legal action?


They pay. Not because they want to. But because they’re exposed.


They know this isn’t just about compensation. This is about:


  • A generational crime.

  • Decades of silence.

  • Governments shielding corporate profit while their children suffered.



The ICC has my submission. The AusNCP has escalated. Fifteen agencies have been named. And the only reason Treasury hasn’t offered a solution yet is because they’re still deciding what costs less: paying me — or facing international justice.


But here’s the truth: it’s too late. This case isn’t going away. It’s already global. And every day they hesitate, the evidence grows, the pressure builds, and the public watches.


The silence that protected them is over.

Treasury is on the record.

Now let’s see what they’re willing to admit — and what they’re willing to pay for.

 
 
 

Comments


Citrus Fruits

© 2035 by Agent Orange Child. Powered and secured by Wix 

bottom of page