Jabberwocky
Frumious Bandersnatch
Guy plays APL poker league. Too funny.
so Mrs polediver have you ever even tried this drug that is used by many very responsibily?
Yet all I see is you trying to re-inforce what the media is already doing.
Yeah it doe's fuck up lives, but theres many like me with a love for this drug who can use for a week non stop no sleep and be normal except have a boogey in your nose that you can never seem to pick lol
Drugs evidence collected by police
An ice-addicted father has been sentenced to 12 months jail after going on a crime spree in Geelong last year.
Tyrone Claridge, 40, committed 16 thefts, broke into a restaurant and ruined a not for profit theatre during a spate of crimes while he was on bail for other offences.
CCTV captured Claridge breaking into a Geelong theatre company where he smashed open a safe containing nearly $4000 in the early hours of November 21, leaving with $10,000 worth of goods and causing $15,000 worth of damage.
In September, Claridge stole a new mobile phone from a Vodafone shop, before going on to steal a car from South Geelong train station carpark two months later.
Claridge also stole 10 brass taps from the front yards of Geelong residents in June last year, which he sold to metal recyclers.
Victoria Police Detective Sergeant Gavin Mullins said Claridge was a prolific offender in the area with a “long drug history”.
Claridge told police he carried out the crimes to pay for his drug habit, saying many were committed when he was high.
Magistrate Ron Saines today said he was “satisfied” there was some “remorse” from Claridge over his crimes, adding, however, that it was “cold comfort to community groups who have worked so hard”.
Read more at http://www.9news.com.au/national/20...nd-bars-after-crime-spree#S957Wxk5qqH2K4PJ.99
A man charged with shooting a police officer and a security guard inside a western Sydney hospital's emergency department is a nurse who had been released on bail earlier that day for allegedly attacking two policemen.
The 39-year-old man is accused of holding a pair of scissors to the throat of a female doctor at Nepean Hospital last night, and then grabbing a gun from Senior Constable Luke Warburton's holster and shooting him in the upper thigh during a scuffle.
The alleged shooter was a former nurse at nearby Westmead Hospital who had left two years ago, partly because of addiction to the drug ice, The Sydney Morning Herald reports.
He was arrested on Tuesday morning and charged with break and enter of a property in Colyton, as well as assaulting two police officers and resisting arrest.
He was bailed and taken to Nepean Hospital in police custody, before being discharged on Tuesday afternoon.
The man somehow suffered more injuries in the evening, including a suspected broken jaw, forcing him to return to Nepean Hospital that night.
An argument then erupted between the man and his wife, who is believed to be in her teens, in Nepean Hospital's emergency ward.
Snr Cnst Warburton was the first police officer on the scene, and the man allegedly fired the officer's gun twice, hitting the policeman and a security guard, before he was subdued.
An elderly witness said the man screamed, "I'm gonna kill you" and "You took my family" before the shots were fired.
Snr Const Warburton is in a critical but stable condition.
The security guard was shot in the calf, and is in a stable condition.
Snr Const Warburton, the handler of police dog Chuck, was instrumental in the capture of one of Australia's most wanted fugitives, Malcolm Naden, in 2012.
In 2012, Chuck brought Naden to heel, biting the murderer on the arm as he emerged from his Hunter Valley hideaway in the dead of night.
Read more at http://www.9news.com.au/national/20...a-former-ice-addict-nurse#1J6JkMXJYHx09oIB.99
Sarah* brings the glass pipe to her lips and inhales the sweet yellow smoke. Sitting back, she lets sweaty euphoria take over her body. She reaches for her phone, but she can’t move. Her ears are ringing, her mouth parched. Panicking, she launches clumsily at the mobile: she must call triple 0. It’s then that she remembers. If she calls the ambos she will be drug tested, and that means violating the terms of her probation. Afraid and alone, she stares at the ceiling and waits.Sarah tells the story with practised nonchalance, smiling as she insists: “At first I thought it was just a good batch of gear!” Seated opposite me at a Wangaratta cafe, she’s edgy, constantly scanning the busy street. She’s in town to see her solicitor following an assault charge – “I’ve been done for a few things” — but has recently moved to neighbouring Myrtleford to “get away from the scene.”
A 20-year-old Aboriginal woman from the part of town locals call “the Bronx”, Sarah struggled to find her place growing up. Bullied in school, she received little encouragement from a system “that only works for nerds.” I ask her what it felt like when she first tried ice. “Like nobody could change the way I felt.” She pauses. “Like I was safe.”
Matt*, a 22-year-old recovering addict from a neighbouring town, is telling me about the time he stayed up for a month. “At one point, I was running up and down the street in the middle of the night. I had a torch in one hand and a knife in the other, and I was just chasing these voices.” Did he know the voices weren’t real? “I guess I didn’t want to know.”
Like Sarah, Matt endured a rocky childhood. Born to drug addict parents who introduced him to weed at just eight, he wagged school daily, “so I could meet up with my mates to go smoke bongs”. He conducts our phone call from the garage, out of the way of his wife, Kelly*, and kids. “They’re the only reason I stopped,” he admits. Kelly has proudly informed me that Matt is 107 days clean, and I ask him if he feels better now than when he was using. “Not really,” he sighs. “Hopefully soon.”
An Australian Drug and alcohol expert says the 'Ice Epidemic' doesn't exist, but we do need to change the way we deal with drugs like methamphetamines.
Criminal syndicate dismantled and almost 500kg of methamphetamine and ephedrine seized in Sydney
22-01-2016 -
An Australian criminal syndicate has been successfully disrupted after the arrest of man alleged to be a crucial component of the internationally linked group.
The 26-year-old Sydney man along with a further three people will face court today, charged over the attempted importation of approximately 159 kilograms of methamphetamine, with a potential street value of up to $106.5 million, and 340 kilograms of the drug precursor ephedrine into Australia.
Australian Border Force (ABF) officers targeted three sea freight containers that arrived from China and were inspected over two days on 6-7 January. The containers held a number of bar stools and boxes of soup packets. ABF officers deconstructed the bar stools, and found a total of 159 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine concealed within the seat-backs. A further 340 kilograms of ephedrine was found concealed in the soup mix packets.
As a result of this detection, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) began an investigation, code-named Operation Serpia, with the assistance of the Australian Border Force (ABF) and the ongoing cooperation of the Chinese National Narcotics Control Commission (NNCC).
The AFP investigation into the criminal group allegedly behind this large scale drug importation resulted in a controlled delivery of three separate cargo containers to three separate commercial addresses in Peakhurst and Kingsgrove.
Police intelligence identified a 57-year-old woman, a 45-year-old man and a 50-year-old man and on Thursday 21 January, the three people were arrested for their alleged role in the importation.
Late Thursday evening, a 26-year-old Sydney man was arrested at Narwee after the AFP conducted a further controlled delivery of a number of the bar stools.
Another man was also arrested during the operation and released without charge, pending further enquiries.
Police will allege that the 45-year-old man and 50-year-old man were employed to remove the drugs from the consignment, and some of the methamphetamine was intended for the 26-year-old Sydney man.
On Thursday 21 January and Friday 22 January, the AFP conducted a number of search warrants across the suburbs of Sydney, seizing further evidence and intelligence relating to the importation.
The AFP estimates that 340 kilograms of the pre-cursor ephedrine could be used to manufacture up to a further 250 kilograms of methamphetamine. This amount of methamphetamine has a potential street value of $167.5 million.
AFP State Manager NSW, Commander Chris Sheehan, said this seizure and these arrests is the culmination of a sophisticated and resource intensive operation where our members have worked tirelessly to ensure those responsible are stopped from causing any more harm to the Australian community.
“The AFP’s long term strategy to combat methamphetamine in Australia is to target and focus on the international syndicates seeking to profit from the misery they inflict on the Australian community,” Commander Sheehan said.
Tim Fitzgerald, ABF NSW Regional Commander, said the significant seizure was the result of ABF intelligence analysts taking a small piece of information and building on it to identify three high risk containers being imported from China.
“Based on intelligence we identified a significant concealment of methamphetamine and ephedrine and our officers were able to disrupt this attempt to illegally import a very large amount of drugs,” Regional Commander Fitzgerald said.
In November 2015, Taskforce Blaze was established between the AFP and the Chinese National Narcotics Control Commission (NNCC) to investigate criminal syndicates trafficking methamphetamine into Australia.
AFP enquiries into this attempted importation are continuing and further arrests have not been ruled out.
All four will face the Sydney Central Local Court today (22 January 2015).
Summary of charges:
57-year-old woman, 45-year-old man and 50-year-old man:
• Conspiracy to import a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, namely methamphetamine, contrary to section 307.1 by virtue of section 11.5 of the Criminal Code (Cth);
• Conspiracy to import a commercial quantity of a border controlled precursor, namely ephedrine, contrary to section 307.11 by virtue of section 11.5 of the Criminal Code (Cth); and
• Conspiracy to possess a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, namely methamphetamine, contrary to section 307.5 by virtue of section 11.5 of the Criminal Code (Cth).
26-year-old man:
• Attempting to possess a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, namely methamphetamine, contrary to section 307.5 by virtue of section 11.1 of the Criminal Code (Cth). This relates to the 1.6kg of substituted material in the two stools.
** High quality vision and images are available from the AFP Media team