Mr TURNBULL (Wentworth—Prime Minister) (14:19): Thank you very much, Mr Speaker. I thank the honourable member for the question. The police, the gambling regulators in Victoria and AUSTRAC are the appropriate people to investigate and examine these allegations. Those agencies have the necessary powers, extensive powers—indeed, powers far greater than a parliamentary committee. The Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation, I am advised, is investigating the allegations, and AUSTRAC is also examining the specific nature of the allegations of money laundering. If any members or senators are aware of allegations of unlawfulness, I strongly encourage them to report those directly to our law enforcement and regulatory agencies. Our law enforcement agencies do an outstanding job in keeping us safe and enforcing and upholding the rule of law, upon which our democracy depends. I encourage the honourable member to provide— The SPEAKER: The member for Denison on a point of order. I'm prepared— Mr Wilkie: Speaker, this man's in fear of his life and has lost faith in the regulator. The SPEAKER: The member for Denison will resume his seat. I say to the member for Denison: there are courtesies, as I pointed out the other day, extended to members of the crossbench in terms of the length of their questions, but there is no favouritism on points of order. If you rise to seek a point of order, you need to state the point of order. It is not an opportunity to make a speech or to make a point you wished to make in your question. If the member for Denison or, for that matter, any other member repeats that, I will have to take further action. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr TURNBULL: The honourable member, I believe, knows very well that the police, the gambling regulators and AUSTRAC are the appropriate agencies to whom to report these allegations and the appropriate agencies to investigate them, invested with all of the necessary powers. The idea that those investigations would be assisted by a simultaneous parliamentary inquiry almost beggars belief. I say to the honourable member that, if he is really concerned with ensuring that these allegations are investigated, that due process is applied and that justice is done, he would confide his revelations, his communications and his information on this matter to the police and the regulators. That is his duty as a member of this parliament and as someone committed to upholding the law.