So, now it seems that the Chinese deals appear to have been confirmed and he received unreported payments (outside of the campaign donations) from this person.
The Age wrote: Fitzgibbon's $150,000 from developer
RICHARD BAKER, PHILIP DORLING AND NICK MCKENZIE
February 3, 2010
Former Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon during question time yesterday.
PRIVATE records of a Chinese-Australian businesswoman close to former defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon indicate he received substantial payments as part of a campaign to cultivate him as an agent of political and business influence.
The confidential papers of businesswoman Helen Liu contradict claims last year by Mr Fitzgibbon - and his father, former Labor MP Eric Fitzgibbon - that they had no financial or business relationship with Ms Liu.
Mr Fitzgibbon resigned from Cabinet last June after it was revealed his brother, NIB Health Funds chief Mark Fitzgibbon, had used his office to lobby for defence health contracts.
The minister's political standing had already been weakened by his failure to disclose that he had accepted two first-class flights to China bankrolled by Ms Liu, a wealthy entrepreneur with high-level political and military contacts in Beijing. He was also renting his Canberra residence from the Liu family.
The documents obtained by The Age show Ms Liu recorded her 1997-98 payment of 850,000 Chinese yuan - approximately $150,000 at the then current values - to Joel Fitzgibbon under the heading ''money paid including expenses and gifts''.
In a letter to a senior Bank of China executive, Ms Liu wrote that Joel Fitzgibbon would become a cabinet minister when federal Labor won power, adding: ''The money we pay him is worthwhile.''
"I totally reject the suggestion that I have received any money from Helen Liu beyond campaign donations which were appropriately declared as required," Mr Fitzgibbon said last night in response to the latest disclosures.
The Age can also reveal that the office of Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard was told in April last year by lawyers for a former business associate of Ms Liu that Mr Fitzgibbon may have had more extensive dealings with the businesswoman than acknowledged.
To read more of this exclusive report, buy your copy of today's Age.