In 2019, another Merivale patron got so wasted after being served a dozen drinks that he âremoved his penis from his pants and flopped it about for other patrons to view,â according to a notification for a first strike offence against Merivale issued by Liquor and Gaming NSW.
Inside Merivale, the company had three different classifications: VIP, VIP black, and the highest tier, FOJ: Friend of Justin. Level 6 members had three membership options, ranging from $5500 to $20,000 per year. They could pay at the bar or transfer it directly into a designated account titled âHemmes Accountâ.
âEach applicant goes through a vetting process following formal referral,â the internal documents show. âQuality over quantity maintains the exclusivity of the brand.â
The profile for one of its top âblack VIPsâ, Matthew Palavidis, reveals he would âdrink magnums between two guests.â
It warned staff at Felix to âAlways have 1 lobster [per] guest availableâ for when he dined at the hatted restaurant with his puppy. At Queen Chow in Enmore, the restaurant was instructed to have â1 x MUDCRAB on standby alwaysâ for the multi-millionaire acoustic engineer.
Across Merivaleâs portfolio of restaurants, Palavidis insisted they always have an $800 bottle of 1983 Chateau Leoville-Las Cases Saint Julien and a $700 bottle of 1996 Chateau Lynch Bages on hand.
Over time, itâs alleged he made junior female staff so uneasy that they updated his profile. âOnly to be served by male staff or management. Has made multiple female staff uncomfortable,â his profile states. Through his lawyers, Palavidis denies ever making any female staff feel uncomfortable and rejects any allegation strongly.
But Merivale continued to allow him access to its venues, offering him silver service treatment while he spent tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars at its bars and restaurants.
In November, a Merivale waitress took Palavidis to court for allegedly sexually touching her without consent. The court heard Palavidis attempted to undo the waitressâs top while she served him a bump of caviar at two-hatted Mimiâs in Coogee âas a present to himselfâ.
Palavidis has denied the allegations. Merivaleâs lawyers did not respond to questions about whether the 63-year-old was still allowed into its venues.
Palavidis and Hemmes âknow each otherâ, Palavidisâ lawyer Paul McGirr told this masthead in November.
âThere is nothing that he cannot get or do within the venues, because they need to protect that whale,â said one former Merivale manager.
âAt no stage has our client called himself a whale,â McGirr said. âWhere and when our client goes as a private taxpaying citizen is entirely a matter for him.â
The allegations of sexual harassment and exploitation span several of Merivaleâs 90 venues, including Level 6 and Hemmesphere in the Ivy precinct.
âThose two spaces are kind of the centre of the universe for all this bad behaviour,â said one former manager.
One former staff member recalled a Merivale executive grabbing her, throwing her on the couch and putting her hand up her dress. âYou certainly didnât feel like you could say anything about it,â she said, citing a fear of repercussions.
An assistant manager at the Ivy Pool Club told a senior manager she had been groped under her skirt by a VIP, but was told not to pursue it further or she would be opening âa can of wormsâ. When one VIP guest allegedly pushed a staff member into the bathroom to do a line of cocaine and ripped open her top, she was told by her supervisor: âDonât beat yourself up about it.â
In response, Merivaleâs lawyers said: âWhat do any of these allegations say about the culture at Merivale? They do not say a thing â they are allegations â which does not mean that they are true. Merivale is and has always constantly strived to improve its workplaces and services.â
Suburban venues, including Queen Chowâs in Enmore and the Coogee Pavilion, had a better reputation among employees. But the VIP program meant that over time, cashed-up members would filter into Merivaleâs neighbourhood restaurants, expecting the same level of attention they received at the Ivy.
One manager recalls getting a plate for a VIP to do cocaine in a private dining room at a suburban Merivale restaurant. Then they had to console a distraught staff member after a VIP put his hand up her skirt.
A manager who raised concerns about the behaviour of VIPs was allegedly told by a Merivale executive: âThey can do whatever they want, and itâs up to us to make sure they have a good time.â
The experience was not the same for all employees. Several long-serving staff said they enjoyed their time at the company.
âThereâs a whole bunch of really great professionals who are kind of being indirectly affected by the bad actors within these groups,â said one former Merivale manager.
Shane Blackett, a former VIP host, said she was sad that she no longer works for Merivale. âIâve met some of my closest friends through staff and patrons that I still hold to this day,â she said.
But the litany of complaints about alleged sexual harassment by VIPs, and the roster of Level 6 members with ties to organised crime pumping cash into Merivale venues, make for an uneasy contrast with Hemmesâ public persona as a philanthropist, entrepreneur and political donor.
Hemmes and his companies have donated more than $350,000 to the Liberal Party since 2018, Australian Electoral Commission records show, while hosting fundraisers with prime ministers at his $100 million mansion, the Hermitage.
Internal messages between managers show the company targeted those with political capital for special treatment.
In one exchange, a manager asks for a list of complimentary Level 6 members close to Hemmes, who did not have to pay in the âworld-class members-only venueâ Level 6.
The list includes Australian Financial Review columnist Joe Aston, LJ Hooker chairman Janusz Hooker, Barrenjoey banker Dyson Bowditch, former realestate.com.au chief executive Jamie Pride, and Rod Bruce, who served as chief of staff to former deputy premier Andrew Stoner. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing from these men.
Bruce, who went on to become an executive at Star Casino, was a âstrong contender for biggest prick up thereâ, one VIP host said, who would âbore the living daylight out of me with the endless drivel of his wafflingâ.
The list also included Tom Callachor, the former chief of staff to both Stoner and former health minister Jillian Skinner.
Internal messages show Callachorâs privileges were put in doubt as soon as he left government. â[Callachor] might not be any more (as heâs not working in government anymore),â one manager says in the internal messages between Level 6 managers that appear to tie free membership to government access.
Callachor then worked at Sodali, the crisis communications firm that represented Merivale until this year. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by Bruce or Callachor or that Hemmes personally directed staff to change Callachorâs level of membership after he changed position.
Liberal powerbroker Michael Photios also features prominently as a complementary member.
The former Liberal MP has spent the past decade wielding his influence over the Liberal Party. Photiosâ acolytes include Climate Change Authority chair Matt Kean.
Dubbed âthe love ratâ by The Daily Telegraph in 2007, Photios celebrated his 50th birthday party in 2011 at the Ivy with his now-wife, Kristina Iantchev. The lobbyist continues to host his lavish Premier Christmas Party each year at the Ivy, with a guest list that features state and federal ministers and media identities.
Merivale staff described Photios and Hemmes as âbestiesâ for the regularity with which they were seen drinking together at Hemmesâ venues. Photios did not respond to requests for comment.
One host, then in her early 20s, was told on her first night in 2013 that her job was to take care of Hemmes and Photios. The host shared messages with a friend about the incident.
âI remember being in Hemmesphere, and Justin came in with his bestie. His nameâs Michael Photios,â she told the Herald, The Age and 60 Minutes.
âThen my manager said, âOK, for the rest of the night, your job is to sit with Justin and drink with himâ. Iâd never drunk with anyone before, nor had I ever been drunk on the job.
âI just felt really uncomfortable. My managers just kept saying, no, you have to, you have to stay there. That is your job for the rest of the night. I just remember getting really inebriated to the point where I sort of felt like Iâve passed that threshold when you sort of start to panic a little bit.
âAnd I remember Michael Photios saying, âWhy donât you guys just go and have sex?â â The host claims Hemmes responded by saying the host was âtoo innocentâ and âtoo greenâ.
But the exchange left a lasting impression.
âI felt pretty quickly that women are kind of disposable,â she said.
Lawyers for Hemmes said their âclient has no recollection of the alleged eventsâ.
When Hemmes walks into one of his 90 venues, the first thing he often does is adjust the volume.
âHeâs a stickler for sound and lighting,â said one former staff member. âItâs a bit to show he is hands-on, that he knows what ambience is better than anyone else here.â
Hemmes lives like a monk for 300 days a year, but when he lets his hair down, it can spiral.
In 2010, when Pierre Fajloun, the bar manager of Ivyâs Level 6, died in a motorcycle accident at the age of 26, Merivale organised a wake for his family in the Ivy penthouse. âThen the next thing you know, itâs 7am and Justin is there making margaritas,â said one former staff member.
âIf our client did mourn as alleged, so what?â Hemmesâ lawyers said.
Itâs alleged the wake got so out of control that the staff member was worried it would breach the Ivyâs licence. They called the police to try to get it shut down. The police never arrived.
Hemmes had âa schoolboy kind of loveâ for young women, the staff member said, that often extended to the people he hired.
Staff would be asked to go back to Hemmesâ harbourside mansion when Level 6 closed. âThe girls would be like, âDo we have to go?â and the security guard would be like, âYeah, you have to goâ,â the former staff member said.
âHe doesnât want anybody to go home. He doesnât want the party to finish. But you canât tell him what to do. You canât say no to him.â
The power dynamics were complicated in a company that was in the business of partying, and had a leader who was both relatively young, charismatic and insanely rich.
Hemmes, who runs the company with his sister, Bettina, reports only to himself.
âItâs very hard to explain the aura that is around a person who is inherently very charismatic, and has always been, to me, personally, unfailingly nice,â one staff member said. âYou are all-powerful. People are terrified of you and also look up to you.â
Former associates say that while Hemmes was brash with women, some would fawn over him because of his status and charm. âAnd itâs hard to separate in this environment, what is appropriate, what is not appropriate,â one said. âPeople would just melt.â
Managers would send messages updating one another on Hemmesâ whereabouts. âJustin had baby,â one manager wrote. â2 days before he was wasted at L6 surrounded by floozeys.â
Hemmesâ lawyers described the claims as âuncorroborated scuttlebuttâ.
In 2009, a woman filed a police report after Hemmes allegedly pushed her in the chest at his club Hemmesphere. The police report has never previously been revealed.
Hemmes allegedly forcibly grabbed the arm of the woman on the dance floor and then wrestled her partner to the ground after putting him in a headlock. The woman and her partner were asked to leave. When the woman went to collect her bag, she called Hemmes âa pigâ.
âThen he shoved me with enough force that I would have fallen to the ground if there hadnât been a security person behind me,â she said. âWe were so shocked that we went immediately to the police.â
The woman considered pressing assault charges but changed her mind after she claimed police warned her that the case would attract a lot of attention.
âThe stress of it all was too much,â she said.
Hemmesâ lawyers claimed the woman had spat on Hemmes and behaved aggressively towards him with her male friend. â[CCTV] footage completely vindicated our client, and showed that the allegations were plainly false,â they said. âBecause of that, it did not go any further.â
The woman denied Merivaleâs allegations. âThis is absolutely untrue,â she said.
NSW Police have had a topsy-turvy relationship with the billionaire, who first came to their attention when he crashed his Scarab class 12-metre speedboat in 1998. The crash threw a dozen passengers into the ocean and sank the $400,000 boat registered in the name of âIJUSTINâ. The same year, the then-26-year-old reportedly lost his licence for driving his Ferrari under the influence.
But it was his $66 million gamble on the Ivy that really catapulted him into the crosshairs of police.
In 2010, he allegedly ordered the strip-search of an employee, Danny Luu, after he was suspected of stealing thousands of dollars from the Establishment in Sydney.
âDo you know who the f--- I am?â Hemmes allegedly demanded of his employee as he was strip-searched, according to court documents obtained by The Daily Telegraph. Luu sued Hemmes for false Âimprisonment, assault and trespassing. Hemmes later settled the case.
A year later, 19-year-old Nicholas Barsoum was punched, kicked, gagged and hauled down the stairs into Ivyâs basement by four bouncers, including trained cage fighter Emmanouil Ntaras. Barsoum was bashed after he confronted bouncers with a group of friends after being kicked out of the club.
NSW Police were âdeliberately divertedâ from discovering the bashed teenager, and a Merivale cleaner removed forensic evidence from the basement, according to police facts first reported by The Australian.
Ntaras was jailed for 27 months over that attack, but Merivale needed an enforcer to continue monitoring the organised crime figures that would pile into its venues.
They turned to Chris Bakis, a boxer respected by Hemmes and the bikies and drug dealers who would turn up at the Ivy. That included Mostafa Baluch, who was caught hiding in a truck in 2021 after cutting off his ankle bracelet while attempting to flee Australia over a 900-kilogram cocaine bust.
Hemmes and Bakis became so close that Bakis was put in charge of Hemmesâ personal security, including for his own office. Perched high above Merivaleâs sprawling Ivy compound on George Street, with a table worth hundreds of thousands of dollars surrounded by Eames chairs, it was where the most intimate of Hemmesâ parties were held.
Bakis, who trained Australian boxer George Kambosos Jr, died in 2023. Merivaleâs lawyers said Bakis was an operations manager at Coogee Pavilion.
âThe more ruthless the crew, the better,â said one former staff member. âThey served as muscle at the Ivy, intervening in situations beyond the regular security guardsâ capabilities, particularly when dealing with suspected gang members and affiliates. They were Chrisâ âboysâ roaming around inside the venue while Chris was stationed at the entrance of Ivy.â
Bakis made police uneasy. One assault charge was withdrawn by consent after Bakis died in 2023.
âLovely guy, though quite scary,â said another former staff member. âHe was an affiliate, but wasnât a gang member himself. A very valuable person for the company.â
Bakis struck fear into both patrons and staff, making it clear that he was between Hemmes and everybody else.
âIf a bikie turned up at the door, then the presence of Chris there, he commanded enough respect that he could say no,â a former staff member said. âA lot of bouncers would be afraid to because their lives would be threatened.â
But there was a problem: Bakis had no licence to be a security guard. NSW Police questioned why he was running security operations for Australiaâs largest hospitality company.
In a meeting with Merivale, NSW Police quickly backed down when Merivale told them that they would be calling the police to handle the situation every time a group of bikies turned up.
While Bakis became the point man for criminals, Hemmes needed a political operator to smooth over relations with the state government after NSW Police began naming and shaming the stateâs most violent venues. The Ivy was consistently at the top of the list. On a busy Saturday night, the Ivy could have more than 100 police walk through the site. âIt was full-on,â a former staff member said. âIt was unreasonable.â
The then-NSW police commissioner Andrew Scipione launched a crackdown on Sydneyâs largest hospitality company as the state government introduced lockout laws following the fatal alcohol-fuelled bashings of teenagers Thomas Kelly and Daniel Christie in 2012 and 2013.
Hemmes turned to Photios, the former Liberal MP turned Merivale VIP and lobbyist, to convince the Liberal government and eventually police that, because of its size, the scrutiny on Merivale was unjustified, cementing a relationship that has continued to pay political dividends.
Ministerial diaries show the former state Liberal government had 20 meetings with Merivale between 2019 and 2023, involving the premier, police minister, transport minister, and treasurer. NSW Labor Premier Chris Minns has had two meetings with Merivale since being elected in 2023.
In 2021, Merivale secured one of the biggest government catering contracts in the state: a six-year multimillion-dollar deal under a competitive tender by the Liberal government to provide food and drinks at two of Sydneyâs largest stadiums, the SCG and Allianz.
âThe quality and high standards of Merivaleâs food and catering services are unmatched,â Merivaleâs lawyers said in a statement. âThis is an incontrovertible, publicly acknowledged fact.â
The family company, Hemmes Trading Pty Ltd, run by Hemmes, his sister, Bettina, and their mother, Merivale, donated $300,000 to the federal Liberal Party that year. Hemmes and Bettina have a net worth of $1.56 billion.
The contract was awarded while Merivale was in the midst of a multimillion-dollar scandal involving allegations it had systematically underpaid some of its lowest-paid employees.
In November 2024, Merivale agreed to settle the $19.5 million underpayment class action without admitting fault. âMerivale defended the claims in the litigation, at all times vigorously denying that any underpayment occurred,â the company said.
But new documents show Merivale, which has more than 5000 employees, is still forcing some staff to work more than full-time hours.
Internal emails reveal that in the middle of the underpayment negotiations, Merivale executives were allegedly forcing full-time staff to work 45 hours per week.
The maximum weekly hours for a full-time employee are 38 hours per week, according to the Fair Work Ombudsman and Merivaleâs contracts with its employees. It is common for staff in many industries to work more than 38 hours voluntarily, but they cannot be forced to do so.
Merivaleâs policies are that âovertime applies after 46 hours worked in one weekâ, meaning the company is effectively forcing staff to work a free day of work per week under a company-wide policy initiated from at least 1 July 2024.
âIt seems like the message is not getting through,â an executive wrote to staff in September 2024. âAll full-timers are required to work 45 hours. Snr management are pulling lists of staff members that are not hitting these hours.â
Hemmesâ top lieutenant, Merivaleâs group general manager Frank Roberts, and one of its executive chefs reiterated the warning in October.
âAll full-timers must work to a minimum 45 hrs per week, again [sic] again no exceptions,â they said.
On Monday, eight migrant chefs from Mexico alleged they were overworked, underpaid and racially discriminated against while working up to 60 hours a week for the hospitality group, which owns property worth an estimated $3 billion.
Merivale denied these claims, stating its âemployees receive pay that meets or exceeds the relevant award entitlementsâ.
Fair Work is investigating the company.
NSW Legislative Council member Dr Sarah Kaine, the state governmentâs chair of committees, said the wage underpayment scandal, ongoing claims of exploitation of employees, allegations of sexual harassment and Merivaleâs political and criminal links were âdeeply, deeply concerningâ.
âWe donât want a situation where any worker in NSW faces those kinds of conditions, but we particularly donât want that with our young workforce. We donât want that to shape how they experience whatâs acceptable at work, or indeed for them to bear scars of that into the future,â the Labor MP said.
âI think Sydneysiders, Melburnians, anyone would be really distressed to think that going into what is branded as a high-end hospitality experience, that that might be off the back of workers who are being mistreated.â
Kaine accused the former Liberal government of failing to do its due diligence on Merivale when it was awarded the multimillion-dollar state government contract.
âI think the pub test, that one might not pass,â she said.
The wage underpayment scandal, claims of sexual harassment, exploitation of female employees and Merivaleâs links to VIPs with serious drug and tax fraud convictions have not dented Hemmesâ reputation among the Liberal political elite.
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In Canberra, Hemmes was ringside for three of then-treasurer Josh Frydenbergâs budgets between 2019 and 2022, flying in on his private plane to take his seat in the parliamentary gallery alongside his ârat packâ of Seven boss Ryan Stokes and Aussie Home Loans boss James Symond as Frydenberg handed down more than $88 billion in JobKeeper payments. Frydenberg, Symond and Stokes are not accused of any wrongdoing.
On a podcast hosted by Liberal senator Andrew Bragg, Hemmes said the JobKeeper payment was âone of the most fantastic incentives the government could have doneâ after it kept thousands of workers on Merivaleâs books during the pandemic. Bragg described his podcast with Hemmes as a âvery exciting dayâ.
Hemmes âsponsoredâ Braggâs Christmas party at the Ivy in 2023, according to the senatorâs declaration of interest. In May, Bragg was appointed to Liberal leader Sussan Leyâs cabinet as the opposition minister for housing, productivity and deregulation. Bragg was contacted for comment.
In March, five months after this masthead revealed claims of staff being sexually harrassed and exploited, and four months after Merivale agreed to settle the wage underpayment scandal, Hemmes hosted former Liberal leader Peter Dutton at the Hermitage after the then-opposition leader jetted in from flood-ravaged Queensland for the night.
The Victorian gothic mansion in Vaucluse is the same venue where Hemmes hosted the Sydney Childrenâs Hospitals Foundationâs Silver Party for 300 guests in May.
Duttonâs soiree followed a $13,000-a-head private dinner for Scott Morrison in 2019 and a $10,000-per-ticket fundraiser with Malcolm Turnbull in 2016.
It is also the same $100 million mansion where Level 6 staff were allegedly asked to come back to continue Hemmesâ private parties after a night of serving VIPs with political and criminal links.
Staff say they have a complicated relationship with the 52-year-old. Hemmes is respected for pioneering Sydney nightlife, but he has made his fortune through a company that has repeatedly allegedly exploited their labour.
Hemmes now cuts an increasingly private and anxious figure. Senior staff and even junior chefs have been forced to sign non-disclosure agreements as a condition of receiving payouts.
The impact on his VIP business has been significant. Sydneyâs corporate high-flyers now head to rival venues that can offer a more discreet service after the revelations in this masthead in October.
Merivaleâs venues have also changed, perhaps none more so than the Ivy. The Ivy Pool Bar is now Jimmyâs rooftop, named after the more family-friendly Jimmyâs Falafel chain. Hemmes has shifted his businesses away from after midnight to the daytime crowd. His appetite for property, including a $55 million redevelopment of a car park in Melbourne, shows no signs of slowing down.
âTheyâll murder it down there,â said one former staff member. âTheyâll build those two sites and take over the CBD.â
But regulators in NSW are now paying attention. SafeWork NSW has been investigating both Merivale and Sydneyâs other major hospitality player, Swillhouse, following earlier claims of sexual assault and exploitation in both of their venues. Merivale resigned from the board of the Australian Restaurant and Cafe Association in October after Hemmes told staff he was âdevastated by the claimsâ.
Kaine said âquestions need to be answeredâ as the state government considers changes to its $40 billion-a-year procurement budget, which could see contracts shortened and awarded only to businesses that provide good outcomes for their employees.
âItâs not the 1950s. Get with the program. I donât care how long itâs been going on; itâs unacceptable,â she said. âWe should make sure that we do everything we can to keep workers safe, particularly young women workers who are vulnerable to exploitation in these circumstances.â
But there is a bigger threat looming. Jacqueline Munro, the NSW Liberal shadow assistant minister for the 24-hour economy, asked the NSW deputy secretary of hospitality and racing, Tarek Barakat, in September if Merivale and Swillhouse were putting their licences at risk.
âIf allegations are proven,â Barakat responded, âthe authority may determine, based on that advice, that that individual is not a fit and proper person to be associated with a liquor licence in NSW, and they can ban them for a period of time or for life from operating in the industry.â
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