
About This Episode
Melbourne lawyer Nicola Gobbo represented some of Australia's most dangerous criminals—while secretly working as a police informer. Her exposed double life became the subject of Season 2 of Trace, the multi-award-winning Australian true crime investigative podcast hosted by Rachael Brown and co-reported by Josie Taylor.
Gobbo's cover was blown spectacularly, triggering worldwide media attention and raising uncomfortable questions about the integrity of Victoria's justice system. The revelation prompted legal appeals from her former clients, with at least one man released from jail and more appeals pending. Yet throughout the firestorm, Gobbo remained largely silent—until she granted her only media interview since going into hiding to Rachael Brown for Trace.
The central mystery Trace explores cuts to the heart of legal ethics: Why did Gobbo become an informer in the first place? How was such an arrangement permitted to exist? Whose side was she actually on? And perhaps most troublingly, did she violate the fundamental rules that protect attorney-client confidentiality—the cornerstone of any functioning legal system?
The implications are staggering. If a lawyer can simultaneously represent clients and report them to police, the entire concept of legal representation collapses. Defendants cannot openly discuss their cases, their strategies, or their defenses with someone they believe is bound by privilege and duty to protect their interests. The trust necessary for justice to function becomes impossible.
Victoria Police faces serious questions about whether they knowingly undermined the law in their efforts to convict criminals. The arrangement with Gobbo—if it operated as exposed—suggests authorities may have prioritized convictions over the procedural fairness that distinguishes legitimate justice systems from authoritarian ones.