When the inquiry was first set up, Police Commissioner
Tony Lauer stated that corruption in the New South Wales Police was not systemic or entrenched; in fact, he provided a map to the Commission purporting to show areas which were guaranteed to be free from any systemic misconduct. The
Kings Cross patrol, the most egregious participant in corruption and criminality, was labelled by the Lauer document as being entirely free from corruption. The sensational revelations coming out of the Commission hearings, and his emphatic assertion that corruption was a non-issue, made Lauer's position as Commissioner untenable. He resigned shortly after the publication of the Commission initial report. Following the Commission hearings, the
New South Wales Government felt that the senior ranks of the NSW Police Service were too compromised by personal misconduct, or personal ties to corrupt officers, for any officer to be expected to navigate the reform of the service and implement decisions in the face of bitter opposition from colleagues and former colleagues.
Peter Ryan was recruited from the
United Kingdom and successfully implemented many of the recommendations of the commission, including drug testing for serving officers, integrity testing and more thorough supervision. The government also undertook a series of legislative changes, which resulted in the majority of recommendations being consolidated in statute. These recommendations included the questioning and investigation procedures that followed arrest. In addition to reforms of the police service, the facilities, staff and equipment of the Commission formed the nucleus of the
Police Integrity Commission; the PIC retained many of the broad powers held by the Wood Royal Commission. As a result of the Commission, three senior police officers were fired for using mace on an uncooperative thief and child molester, 12 years after the event. While stating there was "no doubt" the Commission purged the police of many corrupt officers, journalist
Malcolm Brown also commented that some critics believed this particular action "did no serious harm and only required a word of caution". The Commission's recommendations included equalisation of the
Age of Consent from 18 years of age for homosexual sex between males to that for homosexual sex between females, which at that time was the same as for heterosexual sex at 16 years of age. Partly because of unsupported but widespread conflation of homosexuality with pederasty at that time, and in the context of lawyer
John Marsden's ongoing defamation case against the
Seven Network, this recommendation was initially rejected by the New South Wales Government, and it was not until May 2003 that the Age of Consent
was equalised at 16 under the
Crimes Act 1900. In response to the Commission's findings of widespread police corruption in the sex industry, the New South Wales Government
decriminalised sex work in 1995. == In popular culture ==