July 1, 2026 — 10:42amThe Independent Commission Against Corruption has announced a blockbuster public inquiry in its long-running investigation into Sydney property developer Jean Nassif’s links to Liberal Party figures, councils and Catholic schools.The watchdog on Wednesday confirmed that the chief executive of Catholic Schools NSW Dallas McInerney, Nassif, hotelier and banned political donor Michael O’Hara and “certain Strathfield councillors” would feature in the long-awaited inquiry.In a statement, the ICAC said it would probe whether Liberal party figures, including Christian Ellis, Jeremy Greenwood, Robert Assaf and Jean-Claude Perrottet (the younger brother of former premier Dominic Perrottet) “solicited or accepted political donations, including from prohibited donors, in amounts that were not declared and exceeded applicable donation caps”.It is alleged that this scheme was designed to recruit party members or renew their memberships.ICAC will also investigate whether between 2020 and 2023, political donations were made by or on behalf of Nassif and his company Toplace, who are prohibited donors under the Electoral Funding Act 2018 (NSW), and were “solicited or accepted” by Ellis, Jeremy Greenwood and Charles Perrottet.It has been alleged that these donations were to do “damage to the political career” of the former police minister David Elliott MP and the removal of the then-building commissioner, David Chandler OAM, from public office.ICAC said Strathfield Labor councillors Sharangan Maheswaran and Karen Pensabene were also alleged to have engaged in conduct towards Strathfield councillor Matthew Blackmore that “involves the dishonest or partial exercise of their official functions and/or a breach of public trust, including conduct which could involve blackmail and/or possible breaches of the Surveillance Devices Act 2007.”The existence and timing of the ICAC inquiry has been the subject of speculation since Liberal backbencher Ray Williams used a private members’ statement in mid-2022 to claim his own party colleagues were involved in systemic corruption.The NSW government in 2023 gave the corruption watchdog powers to use secret recordings of conversations that were made illegally by third parties, a move that was extended in October. In February, the NSW Liberals joined the Greens to block those expanded powers.The inquiry is set down for eight weeks and will start on July 27.More to come.Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.From our partners