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KPMG Under Pressure Over Ashurst and Allens Review Claims

19th Jun 2026
KPMG’s handling of whistleblower allegations has put Ashurst and Allens under renewed professional examination after an Australian Senate inquiry heard conflicting accounts about the role external lawyers played in reviewing claims of client data misuse at the accounting group. The latest hearing before the Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services has widened a governance dispute that began with allegations that confidential material linked to Lendlease was used inside KPMG in connection with audit work involving Westpac and Dexus. KPMG has also confirmed that sensitive Optus information was improperly shared with a team pursuing audit work for Telstra, adding further pressure to a case already being watched by ASIC, clients and professional services firms across Australia and the UK. For solicitors and barristers, the most significant issue is not only whether the underlying allegations are proved, but how external legal advice is described to boards, regulators, whistleblowers and parliamentary committees. Ashurst partner Jane Harvey and global chief executive Paul Jenkins were drawn into questions about whether the firm had conducted an investigation or provided employment-related advice connected with KPMG’s own handling of the claims. Allens, represented in the inquiry process by Richard Spurio, Christopher Kerrigan and Ross Drinnan, has been linked to later review work after independent directors pressed for further examination of the allegations. The episode is a reminder that the language used around “reviews”, “investigations” and “legal advice” can carry legal, reputational and regulatory consequences. In-house counsel advising boards must be precise about the scope of an external mandate, the status of any findings and the limits of legal professional privilege. Law firm management teams will also be alert to how quickly a client’s public description of a retainer can become a risk for the firm itself, particularly when parliamentary committees and regulators seek documents or evidence. KPMG Australia has already lost senior leadership, with Andrew Yates resigning as chief executive and Julian McPherson stepping down as head of audit. The firm appointed Stan Stavros as interim chief executive while the controversy continued, and KPMG’s own public statement accepted that its treatment of the whistleblower and its investigation process fell short of expectations. The wider legal sector context is clear. The PwC Australia tax leaks scandal has already sharpened political attention on Big Four governance, client confidentiality and professional accountability. The KPMG case now places law firms at the centre of the same debate, not as peripheral advisers but as institutions whose work product, privilege claims and public characterisation may be tested in real time. Law firms advising major corporates now have a sharper warning: engagement letters, board reporting lines and whistleblower protocols may later be tested by regulators, parliamentarians and clients under pressure.

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