poledriver
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2005
- Messages
- 11,543
Don’t take the Silk Road to gaol
Customs and Border Protection continues to actively monitor the so called ‘anonymous’ online drug marketplace Silk Road and, as online discussions show, is disrupting the illegal trade it facilitates.
Silk Road is an overseas based illicit e-commerce website which sells drugs and other items prohibited under Australian law.
Customs and Border Protection seizes a significant amount of cocaine and MDMA in the international mail stream, which intelligence shows has been purchased through the Silk Road website. These packages may contain only a few grams of an illicit substance, yet our world class detector dogs and cutting edge x-ray technology allow us to identify and seize them.
The message is clear to users of Silk Road; even if your package contains a small amount of drugs for personal use, Customs and Border Protection has the ability to detect them and find you, no matter where you are in Australia.
Customs and Border Protection works closely with federal and state law enforcement partners, as well as international partner agencies, to share intelligence. This creates a global web of intelligence about known sellers and buyers, a web which gets tighter with every transaction.
As a result of the pressure applied by Customs and Border Protection, several ‘anonymous’ Silk Road dealers have announced on forums that they will no longer sell to Australians, or they have imposed more stringent transaction rules on Australian buyers. This demonstrates that Customs and Border Protection is actively disrupting this illegal trade in dangerous drugs.
National Manager of the Cargo and Maritime Targeting Branch, John Gibbon, used these recent announcements to warn users of such alleged ‘anonymous’ websites not to jeopardise their future.
“Don’t fool yourself that a shipment is too small to warrant further investigation. Illegally importing any amount of a border controlled drug, even for personal use, is taken very seriously,” Mr Gibbon said.
“Those who think themselves safe behind an ‘anonymous’ web handle are potentially wasting their money with scammers, and exposing themselves to prosecution. The risk just isn’t worth it.”
http://www.customs.gov.au/site/silkroadgoal.asp
Customs and Border Protection continues to actively monitor the so called ‘anonymous’ online drug marketplace Silk Road and, as online discussions show, is disrupting the illegal trade it facilitates.
Silk Road is an overseas based illicit e-commerce website which sells drugs and other items prohibited under Australian law.
Customs and Border Protection seizes a significant amount of cocaine and MDMA in the international mail stream, which intelligence shows has been purchased through the Silk Road website. These packages may contain only a few grams of an illicit substance, yet our world class detector dogs and cutting edge x-ray technology allow us to identify and seize them.
The message is clear to users of Silk Road; even if your package contains a small amount of drugs for personal use, Customs and Border Protection has the ability to detect them and find you, no matter where you are in Australia.
Customs and Border Protection works closely with federal and state law enforcement partners, as well as international partner agencies, to share intelligence. This creates a global web of intelligence about known sellers and buyers, a web which gets tighter with every transaction.
As a result of the pressure applied by Customs and Border Protection, several ‘anonymous’ Silk Road dealers have announced on forums that they will no longer sell to Australians, or they have imposed more stringent transaction rules on Australian buyers. This demonstrates that Customs and Border Protection is actively disrupting this illegal trade in dangerous drugs.
National Manager of the Cargo and Maritime Targeting Branch, John Gibbon, used these recent announcements to warn users of such alleged ‘anonymous’ websites not to jeopardise their future.
“Don’t fool yourself that a shipment is too small to warrant further investigation. Illegally importing any amount of a border controlled drug, even for personal use, is taken very seriously,” Mr Gibbon said.
“Those who think themselves safe behind an ‘anonymous’ web handle are potentially wasting their money with scammers, and exposing themselves to prosecution. The risk just isn’t worth it.”
http://www.customs.gov.au/site/silkroadgoal.asp
