'It's a joke', One Nation founder shouts as she and a colleague are found guilty
Pauline Hanson, the controversial politician who once led Australia's One Nation party, was sentenced to three years in prison yesterday after being found guilty of electoral fraud.
One Nation's co-founder, David Ettridge, was also given a three-year jail term after being found guilty of the same charge.
As the verdicts were announced in Brisbane's District Court, Hanson shouted: 'Rubbish, I'm not guilty ... it's a joke.'
After hugging family and friends, the former fish-and-chip shop owner was led away in tears by court officials. Ettridge, 58, who worked as One Nation's financial director, told the court: 'I still maintain my innocence.'
The pair had pleaded not guilty to fraudulently registering One Nation, which they founded in Queensland in 1997. Hanson, 49, had also denied dishonestly obtaining almost A$500,000 (HK$2.55 million) in electoral reimbursements after a state election in Queensland in 1998 in which One Nation won a million votes - almost 25 per cent of the total.
But the District Court's 12 jurors found the pair guilty on all charges after more than nine hours of deliberation.