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Australian faces drug charges in Malaysia

A 32-year-old Australian man may face the death penalty in Malaysia after being arrested for allegedly dealing in methamphetamines.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) in Canberra has confirmed the man was arrested on March 1.

"Malaysian authorities arrested a 32-year-old Australian man from Western Australia for allegedly selling methamphetamines," a DFAT spokesperson said on Monday.

"Consular officials in Kuala Lumpur are seeking access in order to offer consular assistance to the man."

The man is yet to be charged.

"It is possible that he will be charged with Trafficking in Dangerous Drugs, Section 39B of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952, which carries a mandatory death penalty upon conviction," the DFAT spokesperson said.

Malaysia has executed three Australians for drug offences in recent decades.

Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers were hanged in July 1986, followed by Michael McAuliffe in June 1993.

Asked about the case on Monday, Acting Foreign Minister Craig Emerson declined to go into details.

"We will provide, as we always do, every consular assistance to every Australian citizen but beyond that it would be wrong for me to speculate about the nature and causes of the apprehension of this man," Dr Emerson told reporters in Canberra.

"Let the justice system take its course."

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Four arrested after NZ cocaine seizure

New Zealand police believe an international drug ring has been disrupted after the arrest of four men and seizure of cocaine bound for Australia with a street value of $NZ1.5 million ($A1.16 million).

The 2kg of cocaine was stopped at the border by New Zealand Customs last week and two Australians aged 27 and 49 and two Brazilians aged 23 and 26 arrested.

Police say the drug syndicate was importing drugs from South America into Australia, via New Zealand.

The men face a range of charges including importing a Class A controlled drug, conspiracy to export a Class A controlled drug, and possession and supply of a Class A controlled drug.

Police say it is believed more than 18kg of cocaine from this syndicate has been seized by Australian authorities in recent months.

The joint operation involved the Organised Financial Crime Agency of New Zealand, the Australian Federal Police, Queensland Police and Customs services on both sides of the Tasman.

Here.
 
Dominic Bird, 32, faces death penalty after drug arrest in Malaysia


MALAYSIAN police have confirmed a WA man "tentatively charged" with trying to sell 225g of methamphetamine could face the death penalty.

Malaysian Police Narcotics Supt Nafisah Adam said today that Dominic Jude Christopher Bird, 32, was being held in custody, along with three local men.

They were all arrested on Thursday over a string of alleged drug offences.

Acting Foreign Minister Craig Emerson declined to go into details about the arrest today.

"We will provide, as we always do, every consular assistance to every Australian citizen but beyond that, it would be wrong for me to speculate about the nature and causes of the apprehension of this man,'' Dr Emerson said in Canberra.

"Let the justice system take its course.''

Supt Nafisah said Mr Bird had been caught with a large quantity of methamphetamine "in his hands'' at a coffee shop in the capital, Kuala Lumpur.

A search of his nearby house had uncovered a "smaller volume'' of drugs and led to the arrests of three local men.

Under Malaysian law, a person convicted of possessing more than 50g of methamphetamine is declared a drug trafficker and faces a mandatory death sentence.

Supt Nafisah said the arrests were part of an ongoing anti-drugs operation, and that the men had been under surveillance for some time before their arrests.

"It's part of a team of investigation that was carried out,'' she said.

While Mr Bird and the other men had been "tentatively charged'', official charges could follow chemical analysis of the seized substances.

"He is being held and tentatively we will charge him, but it depends on the contents of the substance on him,'' Supt Nafisah said.

"But I can say (if the drugs are confirmed), definitely he will be charged.''

Supt Nafisah said under Malaysian law, the men could be held in custody for up to 14 days without charge while police continued to investigate them.

They are expected to initially appear in a magistrates court in Kuala Lumpur but could be transferred to a higher court if serious charges are laid.

"If it's confirmed drugs, his case will be transferred to a higher court,'' Supt Nafisah said.

"Yes, they could face the death penalty if convicted.''

Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed today that Bird had been arrested on March 1.

"Malaysian authorities arrested a 32-year-old Australian man from Western Australia for allegedly selling methamphetamines,'' a DFAT spokesperson said in Canberra.

"Consular officials in Kuala Lumpur are seeking access in order to offer consular assistance to the man.

"It is possible that he will be charged with Trafficking in Dangerous Drugs, Section 39B of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952, which carries a mandatory death penalty upon conviction.''

Mr Bird's father, Clayton Bird, was reported to have said he was unaware of his son's arrest and had not been able to contact him recently.

Dominic Bird had lived with his father in the southern Perth suburb of Success but had then moved into an apartment in Mt Lawley about six months ago.

Malaysian police federal narcotics director Noor Rashid Ibrahim was reported as saying Mr Bird intended to smuggle drugs back to Australia.

Supt Nafisah said she was not aware if Mr Bird's father planned to travel to Malaysia to see his son.

Malaysia has executed three Australians for drug offences in recent decades.

In July 1986, Perth men Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers were hanged for trafficking 141.9g of heroin.

The duo were the first Westerners executed under Malaysia's new tougher laws for drug convictions over 15 grams of heroin, with their hanging straining relations between Australia and Malaysia at the time.

Michael McAuliffe was hanged in Malaysia in June 1993 after serving eight years in jail for heroin trafficking.

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Sydney police bust clandestine drug lab

State and federal authorities have busted a clandestine drug lab and arrested a man as part of their offensive against Asian crime syndicates.

The 26-year-old man will face court charged with manufacturing the drug ice in an illegal laboratory in the Sydney suburb of Burwood, and importing an illicit precursor chemical.

The arrest follows a joint investigation by detectives from the State Crime Command's Asian Crime Squad, the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service and the NSW Crime Commission.

Police will allege a clandestine laboratory, found in one of two units they searched before the arrest on Friday, was being used to make methylamphetamine, known on the street as ice.

They also located 20kg of a type of pseudoephedrine called ContacNT which they will claim was illegally imported from overseas.

The arrested man was refused bail and is due to appear in Parramatta Bail Court on Saturday.

"This operation sends a strong deterrence message to those attempting to import or manufacture illicit substances in Australia," Customs and Border Protection investigations manager Kingsley Woodford-Smith said in a statement.

The arrest comes after police seized enough precursor chemicals to make $76 million worth of ice in a car at Smithfield, in Sydney's west, on Thursday.

A 29-year-old Smithfield man has been charged over the discovery and is due to appear at Fairfield Local Court on March 26.

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Warrant out for drug charge model on the run

A SWIMSUIT model charged with importing drugs is on the run from police - risking $150,000 in bail pledges by a top barrister and a flamboyant doctor.

A NSW Supreme Court judge issued an arrest warrant for former Penthouse Pet and Ed Hardy bikini model Simone Farrow on Tuesday after she skipped bail and missed two court appearances last month.

Voted one of FHM magazine's "sexiest women in the world", Farrow is facing charges of importing a "marketable" quantity of "ice" into Australia after her arrest in 2009.

Also known as Simone Starr, the tattooed 37-year-old was released on bail after Sydney barrister Anthony Renshaw and doctor Joseph Grech agreed to forfeit $150,000 as security, the court heard.

Renshaw pledged $50,000 and she had been staying at an apartment where the barrister lives in Double Bay as part of her bail conditions, the court heard.


Swimsuit model Simone Starr

Grech, who moved to Coffs Harbour last year, put up $100,000.

Farrow's bail conditions were later altered to allow her to live at Grech's Paddington unit, the court heard - and that Grech re-mortgaged the property to secure the bail money.

The judge issued a warrant for her arrest on Tuesday, four days after she failed to appear at a bail hearing in the Supreme Court for allegedly breaching her bail conditions.

The model allegedly provided a forged medical certificate to Rose Bay Police after she failed to report to the station.

The court was told Farrow had checked into a hospital that day. When police and her legal team could not find Farrow that afternoon, Justice Stephen Rothman gave them until Tuesday to find her.

With Farrow still missing, the judge issued a warrant for her arrest.

Renshaw, in a courtroom plea to Judge Rothman, asked to withdraw his bail offer.

"It's the first time I have provided surety ... I'm extremely embarrassed," Renshaw told the court.

Agreeing to the request, Justice Rothman said: "Once bitten, twice shy."

Grech is waiting to find out whether he will lose his $100,000.

"I'm trying to work that out at the moment - I'm speaking to police and I'm a little bit concerned," he said.

Renshaw said he "can't ethically comment" when contacted by the Sunday Herald Sun.

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Truckie 'did not think transporting drugs was a serious crime'


A SOUTH Australian truck driver has been jailed for 18 months after he tried to transport more than 6kg of cannabis into Perth.

Andrew Minarsky, 49, was sentenced in Perth’s District Court today after pleading guilty to possessing a prohibited drug with intent to supply or sell.

During sentencing, Judge Shauna Deane said she was concerned by Minarksy's admission that he did not think his crime was serious because he knew many truck drivers who often couriered drugs and were never caught.

The father-of-two was stopped by police on April 8 last year while driving from Adelaide to Perth.

The officers uncovered 6.337kg of the drug hidden in a tool box in his truck.

Judge Deane said the street value of the drug was significant.

She said Minarksy agreed to courier the drug in exchange for payment after he was approached by a third party.



He refused to give police details about the other people involved because he said they were members of an outlaw motorcycle gang.

Minarsky, who has driven trucks for more than 20 years, admitted transporting cannabis into WA on 20 other occasions, but insisted he had never sold it.

Judge Deane dismissed a suggestion from Minarsky’s defence counsel that he was merely a drug courier and said he had been a necessary part of a drug network.

“You played a vital role,” she said.

“You engaged in this offending knowing full well it was illegal."

The court was told Minarsky had been addicted to cannabis since his teens and used it to cope with depression.

Minarsky has been declared a drug trafficker.

He will be eligible for parole after nine months.

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Eleven arrests in early-morning drug raids in Sydney


ELEVEN people have been arrested over the supply of drugs and guns following a series of raids in Sydney's southwest.

More than 100 officers stormed six properties in Villawood, Punchbowl and Bass Hill about 7.30am (AEDT) today.

It follows a 10-month investigation by Strike Force Yanda into the supply of firearms and prohibited drugs, including heroin, ice and cannabis around the Bankstown and Villawood areas.

Nine men between 17 and 44 years of age, and two women, aged 23 and 34, were arrested and taken to local police stations for questioning.

They are expected to be charged with multiple offences, including the supply of illegal drugs, firearms and participating in a criminal group.

"We have completely dismantled, from the top down, a locally-based criminal syndicate involved in dealing firearms and drugs in Bankstown and Villawood over many months," said Superintendent Dave Eardley from Bankstown Local Area Command.



Officers from Operation Spartan are also working with the Strike Force detectives to investigate possible links between this syndicate and the recent spate of drive-by shootings in Sydney.

Operation Spartan has so far arrested 187 people who have been charged with a total of 349 offences.

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Crime syndicate arrests rise



FIVE members of what local police describe as an Assyrian criminal syndicate were arrested last week by Strike Force Face in relation to drug and gun crime.
They did not apply for bail and will be at Fairfield Local Court on March 12.

Strike Force Face was formed by detectives at Fairfield local area command last July to target the supply of methylamphetamine and cannabis by members of the criminal group.

Three men aged 18, 19 and 20 were taken into custody before 7am last Wednesday.

A fourth member of the alleged syndicate, an 18-year-old man, was arrested on Tuesday night.

They were taken to Cabramatta and Fairfield police stations and are expected to be charged with more than 20 offences, including drug supply and participating in a criminal group.

Another member, a man, 21, was arrested in Carramar about 1.15pm last Wednesday.

So far, eight members of the "small" criminal group have been arrested by police.

The syndicate's alleged kingpin, a man aged 27, was arrested by police on January 27, which allegedly resulted in the seizure of nine firearms, ammunition and drugs.

Two other men, aged 19 and 20, remain in custody on unrelated matters.

South-West Metropolitan Region commander, Assistant Commissioner Frank Mennilli, said the arrests send "a strong message to the local community, particularly individuals who will involve themselves in extortion, drugs or firearm offences".

"We will target you, we will arrest you and we will put you before the court . . . We will not stop until we put an end to it," he said.

Fairfield Superintendent Peter Lennon said he believed the major players of the syndicate had been arrested.

"It's satisfying for us because we're here to work for the community," he said.

Police weren't able to confirm the arrests were linked to the recent spate of shootings in south-western Sydney.

Investigations continue.

Anyone with information should contact Fairfield detectives on 9728 8399 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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Drugs, cash and abalone seized in gang crime squad raid


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POLICE gang crime squad officers have charged a 48-year-old man after allegedly finding drugs, cash and abalone during a raid on his Balga house yesterday.

It will be alleged nearly 10 grams of methylamphetamine, $30,000 in cash and 60 abalone were seized during a search of the Loxwood Road house yesterday morning.

The man has been charged with one count of possessing a prohibited drug with intent to sell or supply, one count of possessing a prohibited drug and one count of unlawful possession of cash.

He will appear in the Perth Magistrates Court on March 21.

Department of Fisheries officers seized the abalone and are investigating how the man obtained them.

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Alleged drug mule says he worked alone

AAP

An Australian man facing a possible death sentence for allegedly smuggling drugs into Bali has told police he was working alone, his lawyer says.

Edward Myatt was arrested last week after he was caught allegedly trying to smuggle 1.1kg of hashish and seven grams of methamphetamine into Bali.

The 54-year-old had been tight-lipped since his arrest, refusing to answer questions from police who suspect he is part of a larger drug smuggling network.

However, his lawyer Robert Khuana said on Thursday that Myatt was now co-operating with authorities.

The Ballarat-born man has now admitted to attempting to import the drugs into Bali but denied during an interrogation on Thursday that he was part of a larger drug-smuggling operation.

"He admitted that he worked alone, not with someone else, not in an organisation," Mr Khuana said.

Myatt, who could face the death penalty if convicted of drug trafficking, told police he had swallowed 71 capsules containing hashish and one filled with methamphetamine before boarding a flight from India to Bali.

Mr Khuana said Myatt had told police that some of the drugs were for personal use.

But he also admitted that he intended to offload some of the drugs, worth an estimated $70,000, while he was in Bali.

"He's an addict. Some he planned to sell it himself but there's no contact or network in Bali," Mr Khuana said.

"He bought it in India, he packaged it himself, he swallowed it himself without help from anyone in a hotel in India."

Myatt had a return flight to India booked for April 6.

Police have said previously that they suspect Myatt, who has visited Bali on at least five other occasions, is a long-term drug mule.

Myatt was born in Australia but is understood to have lived in the United Kingdom for a number of years.

He has both an Australian and British passport.

Police are yet to formally charge him but the Bali Customs office is already pressing for him to be sentenced to death if convicted.

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Pregnant Malaysian with drugs in stomach arrested at Australian airport

MELBOURNE, March 8 — A five-month pregnant Malaysian was detained here last month, allegedly carrying on her person 34 pellets of heroin, the Malaysian consulate confirmed today.

The 36-year-old from Selangor’s Puchong was taken to hospital and X-rayed after being detained at the airport on February 10, Bernama Online reported.

X-rays revealed drugs in her stomach.

The mother of four is presently detained at the Dame Phyliss Frost Detention Centre for Women in Deer Park, 35kms away from city centre. Malaysian consul general Dr Mohd Rameez Yahaya has talked to the woman.

Dr Rameez said that she told him she did transport the heroin to Australia as asked by a man she met at Petaling Jaya’s Sunway Pyramid in exchange for US4,000 (RM12,082).

The Magistrate’s Court here will hear her case in July, after the birth of her child.

Deer Park detention centre is also where former Sarawak nurse Beatrice Louis Johie, 27, is detained while waiting for her March 27 sentencing for allegedly importing saleable drugs.

The consul general will visit both women next week.

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Busted global cocaine syndicate used NZ as stopover


A trans-Tasman police and customs operation has busted a cocaine syndicate which used New Zealand as a stop off point for the drugs.

Police say the drugs were transported through New Zealand on their way from South America to Australia.

Auckland customs seized 2kg of cocaine - worth $1.5 million - destined for Australia last week and arrested one member of the syndicate.

Three other people have since been arrested in New Zealand and charged with importing, conspiracy to export and possession and supply of a Class A controlled drug.

Those arrested include two Australian nationals aged 27 and 49, a Brazilian national resident in Australia aged 26 and a 23-year-old Brazilian.

Police allege around 18kg of cocaine originating from the syndicate has been seized by the Australian authorities over the past few months.

Detective Inspector Bruce Good said he was "very happy" with the operation which involved a number of detectives and customs investigators in Auckland as well as staff from the Australian Federal Police.

"By our combined efforts we have prevented a significant drug operation from continuing to operate and expand," said Good.

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Amphetamine tablet haul leads to jail for Cairns man


A MAJOR Crime and Misconduct Commission investigation into drug trafficking has led to the jailing of a second Cairns man who attempted to bring 3000 amphetamine tablets into the Far North.
"Operation Warrior" dismantled a sophisticated drug trafficking network targeting the Gold Coast, Cairns, Sydney and Melbourne in mid-2010 and resulted in the arrests of 71 people, including Matthew John Anthony, 29.
Yesterday, Anthony pleaded guilty in Cairns Supreme Court to one charge of drug trafficking and was sentenced to two years' jail, to be released after serving three months.
The court heard Anthony had been approached by a friend to courier tablets from the Gold Coast to Cairns in December, 2009, after he lost his job and needed the $2000 on offer for completing the drug-run to pay off debt.
Anthony never saw the money as he was arrested in Brisbane on December 17, while boarding a bus to Cairns with what he thought were 3000 ecstasy tablets, but were actually low-grade amphetamines.
Justice Jim Henry said the man, who now works as a tradesman on Cape York, deserved a discount in actual jail time because it was a one-off incident and he only played a small role compared to others caught up in the sting.
But the judge said he would be "failing in duty" if he did not impose time behind bars.
"People need to know if they engage for commercial benefit in activities of this kind, they will go to jail," he said.

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Police find suspected clan lab at Dawesville

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Photo:Officers say they noticed a strong chemical smell at the Dawesville property. (ABC News: Veronica Buck)

Updated March 06, 2012 18:36:50

A 29-year-old man is being questioned by police over the discovery of a suspected drug laboratory at Dawesville south of Perth.

Officers arrived at a home in Durham Crescent this morning to arrest a man wanted by Queensland police over drug offences.

They say they noticed a strong smell of acetone, a chemical commonly used in the manufacture of methamphetamine.

A woman and a one year old boy have been taken to hospital for observation.

Chemical experts from Fire and Emergency Services Authority and the police have entered the home and are examining the suspicious substances.
 
Mexican Drug Cartel Targets Australia


Australia is a huge island, with stretches of lonely, rocky coastline that extend for thousands of miles. What's more, there are lots of harbors and airports.

In short, opportunities are plentiful for an enterprising Mexican drug trafficker to move his product 8,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean to service the vibrant new market Down Under.

One such drug lord is Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman, head of Mexico's Sinaloa cartel. He's a cunning, small-statured, exceedingly dangerous outlaw recently dubbed "the world's most powerful drug trafficker" by the U.S. Treasury Department.

In recent years, Latin American drug traffickers such as Guzman have been searching for newer, untapped markets. Cocaine use in the United States is in steep decline, though it's still the world's largest marketplace for illegal drugs. Cocaine smugglers have developed a booming trade in Australia, particularly in cities like Sydney with its young, prosperous, fun-loving population.

Highly Lucrative Trade

Mexican organized crime is playing a more active role in Australia, which has a significant cocaine problem, according to John Lawler, chief executive of the Australian Crime Commission.

In the past four years, Guzman has expanded his reach throughout western Mexico and the world. He currently has operations in North America, Central America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa — and now Australia.

The Sinaloa cartel has been able to move in a more global way faster than some of the other cartels, says Rodney Benson, chief of intelligence at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

"They've recognized a place like Australia, where the price of cocaine can yield them a much greater profit margin compared to selling a kilogram here in the United States," he says.

The markup is impressive.

Australian authorities discovered more than 100 pounds of cocaine and methamphetamine concealed in cases of Mexican beer in a sea cargo shipment last October.
A kilo of cocaine in Brownsville, Texas, sells for $16,000. The same brick goes for up to $250,000 in Sydney. It's no wonder Latin America's cocaine cowboys want in on the action.

Many Ways To Import Cocaine

Australian authorities have ramped up border enforcement to try and control the blizzard. The Australian Federal Police reports cocaine seizures increased 103 percent in 2010-2011 compared to the previous fiscal year.

But the Sinaloans are endlessly, legendarily resourceful.

On the U.S.-Mexico border, they use tunnels, 18-wheelers and ultralight aircraft. In Australia, traffickers hide cocaine in freight as varied as paving stones and lawnmowers; it's sent through the postal system, couriers tape it to their bodies and private yachts ferry it across the Pacific.

The loads don't necessarily come directly from Mexico or South America — they are often transshipped through third countries such as Nigeria, the Netherlands, Canada or the island of Vanuatu.

"With such a very, very large coastline and with the opportunity of cartels and other organized criminals coming to Australia through multiple routes, to try and detect each and every [shipment] is an extraordinarily difficult task," Lawler says.

Once the cocaine is in Australia, local crime syndicates take over.

Federal investigators have intelligence that Sinaloa operatives have visited Australia to link up with local drug distributors, and Australian traffickers have traveled to Latin America to do the same.

Nick Bingham, commander of the New South Wales Police drug squad, says extravagant cocaine profits have attracted everybody: Lebanese gangs, Chinese gangs, Albanian gangs, and homegrown outlaw motorcycle gangs known as "bikies."

"Some of our larger groups are the Hells Angels, the Rebels, the Bandidos, the Comanchero, the Nomads, the Gypsy Jokers," he says. "And certainly they're heavily involved in all sorts of organized crime but we believe cocaine is becoming a more attractive market to them."

'National Cocaine Binge'

Americans know the price of 35 years of coke abuse: perforated septums, catatonic crackheads and overdose deaths.

The drug was much less common in Australia, where the country is now in the midst of what The Sydney Morning Herald called a "national cocaine binge."

I could get it here in 10 minutes if I wanted to. I couldn't get a pizza delivered in 10 minutes. That's how fast and easy it is to get it.
- A young Sydneyite on the ease of obtaining cocaine
"It's seen as a very desirable drug. It's seen as a cleaner drug in some respects especially compared to amphetamines. It's in the media, it's in the news, they want to try it, they like it, and away they go," says Mark Ferry, a drug treatment counselor in Sydney.

One of Ferry's clients is Raymond, a tall, jittery, 17-year-old aboriginal boy from the Sydney suburb of Redfern. He was caught shoplifting to support his coke habit and sent to the Noffs Foundation drug treatment center.

"When I first used it, it just made me feel happy, you go longer in sex. I mean you just feel energetic when you're on it. So I just kept using and using," he says.

Cheap crack cocaine hasn't made it to Australia, as of now. The high price of powdered coke prevents more poor kids like Raymond from becoming addicts.

The typical profile of the modern Australian cocaine user is young, single, well-educated and well-paid.

Blade — the fictitious name he chose for an interview — is a fair-haired, 23-year-old club photographer who met an NPR reporter at a trendy rooftop bar in Kings Cross, where good-looking young people quaff glasses of Victoria Bitter and check their iPhones.

"I could get it here in 10 minutes if I wanted to," he says, referring to cocaine. "I couldn't get a pizza delivered in 10 minutes. That's how fast and easy it is to get it."

Drug Bubble Unlikely To Burst

A shrewd merchandiser doesn't just supply a market; he creates demand for his product. And that's what's happening with cocaine in Australia.

"Cocaine is a little bit more fabulous, sorry. You've got money in Sydney, because it's so expensive that only the rich models and designers and musicians and all the cool kids do it," Blade says. "So you look cool if you do it, pretty much."

He's asked whether he ever thinks about the murder and mayhem in Latin America that is associated with the cocaine trade.

"I guess we live in this bubble and so when you go out and party the last thing you're thinking about is who you're affecting by doing something illegal, like cocaine," he says.

The bubble is unlikely to burst anytime soon. A strong Australian dollar, healthy economy and the drug's image as "a little bit fabulous" point to the expanding popularity of cocaine Down Under.

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Airport drug bust nets 18kg of methamphetamine, $500,000


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WEST Australian police have displayed 18.2kg of methamphetamine and $540,000 in cash seized in an inter-state operation.

The drugs were concealed in 78 juice containers seized from a storage unit at Perth Airport on February 10.

They have been linked to a series of NSW raids around the same time that netted 75kg of heroin and methamphetamine and $900,000 cash. A 43-year-old Iranian with dual Australian citizenship was arrested.

Detective Senior Sergeant Brett Ranford said Organised Crime detectives uncovered the methylamphetamine, which was nominally valued at about $6 million, but potentially worth $36 million or more on the street.

He said the drug haul had removed a potential 364,000 drug hits off Perth streets.

"In that effect alone I think it's quite significant," Det Sen-Sgt Ranford said.



Police believe the drugs were imported into WA and are thought to be linked to an earlier drug seizure of 85kg of heroin and meth in NSW

NSW police at the time said they had smashed a ``sophisticated'' heroin and methamphetamine smuggling operation from Iran.

While the Perth drugs were seized three weeks ago after a tip-off from the NSW Crime Commission, they were revealed today after an ongoing Sydney operation known as Strike Force Taipan.

No arrests have been made in WA.

``Of course it stands to reason there are some WA links, but at this stage we are working closely with our NSW counterparts to identify the links over there and we'll be progressing through them,'' Detective Sen Sgt Ranford said.

He said WA was a lucrative market for eastern states-based drug rings, due to its booming economy and high drug prices.

``There is quite a profit to be made just by selling the drugs in Western Australia, as against the drug prices that you might see in the eastern states,'' he said.

Last month's seizure was one of the biggest methamphetamine busts in WA, he said, adding the drugs were 70 to 80 per cent pure.

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SA police seize drugs, guns and knives


South Australian police have seized drugs, stolen shotguns and knives from an Adelaide home.

Police searched the 21-year-old man's Davoren Park home on Thursday, when they found five cannabis plants grown hydroponically.

They also found stolen firearms including two sawn-off shotguns and a replica pistol.

Ammunition as well as knives, an axe, weapons and other drugs were also found and seized by police.

The man has been reported for cultivating cannabis, possessing prohibited articles, firearm offences and other drug possession offences.

He is to appear in the Elizabeth Magistrates Court at a date to be fixed.

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Police target drug dealers in Villawood with alleged with links to drive-by shootings


A SERIES of early morning raids in southwest Sydney yesterday had ripped the heart out of a street-level drug syndicate with possible links to the recent spate of drive-by shootings, police said.

More than 100 officers from the southwest metropolitan region conducted the raids on six properties in Bass Hill, Punchbowl and Villawood.

A fleet of police vehicles simultaneously descended on the houses as torrential rain lashed the area, with officers arresting everyone from the alleged kingpin down to his street runner, police said.

Officers used battering rams as they worked in the heavy downpours to smash through the doors of two houses in Yungaburra St, Villawood, where three neighbouring properties were hit at once.

Dog Squad police led their animals through one of the homes and a young man and woman, both looking dishevelled after the 7.30am wake-up call, were taken into custody.

Recommended Coverage

Sydney police raids
A total of nine men and two women - aged between 17 and 44 - were arrested in the operation, which had been planned to target illegal drug and gun supply in the south western suburbs.

Several members of the same family had been identified by police as targets of the sting. Police allegedly seized drugs and other illicit goods during the raids and 49 charges were laid following the morning's events.

The raids came after a nine-month investigation into heroin, ice and cannabis dealing.

Region commander Assistant Commissioner Frank Mennilli said police believed the drug-supply business operating in the area had now been totally pulled apart.

"I am confident we have not only put a dent in this criminal enterprise but rather completely dismantled it from the top down, from the alleged kingpin to his street-level runners," he said.

Mr Mennilli said officers working under the banner of Operation Spartan would now investigate any potential links between the drug syndicate and other gun-related crime.

The operation was launched in January in response to a series of drive-by shootings.

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SYD - Two charged as $250k ecstasy seized

SYD - Two charged as $250k ecstasy seized

Two men have been charged after police allegedly found 5,000 ecstasy tablets in a car in Sydney's south-west last night.

The silver Holden Commodore was stopped on the M5 motorway at Casula at about 9:30pm (AEDT).

During a search police seized the ecstasy, which they say has an estimated street value of $250,000.

Police then arrested the car's 36-year-old driver and found a knife.

He was charged with driving while suspended and having custody of a knife in a public place.

A 32-year-old passenger was also arrested after police allegedly found a device to smoke ice.

He was charged with large-scale commercial drug supply and possessing a drug implement.

Both men were refused bail to face court today.​

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-14/two-charged-as-24250k-ecstasy-seized/3888326
 
Swag of Drugs Found Darwin

Swag of Drugs Found Darwin

Northern Territory Police have charged a Victorian man with supplying and possessing a commercial quantity of cannabis after they allegedly found tens of thousands of dollars worth of the drug in a swag in his vehicle.

Superintendent Peter Schiller from the Drug and Specialist Support said the 46-year-old was arrested at Adelaide River on Tuesday night.

“The man was arrested by Drug and Organised Crime Detectives at about 9pm,” Superintendent Schiller said.

“Police allege 1.483 kilograms of hydroponic cannabis was found rolled up in a swag in a locked compartment in the Nissan utility he was driving.

“Police allege the man had driven the drugs, valued at $74,000, from Victoria with the intention of selling them in the Top End.

“The man was conveyed to Darwin and remains in Police Custody.”

Superintendent Schiller said the man was charged with:

Possess schedule two drug – commercial; and

Supply schedule two drug – commercial.

He is due to appear in the Darwin Magistrates Court on March 21.​

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http://www.pfes.nt.gov.au/Media-Centre/Media-releases/2012/March/15/Swag-of-Drugs-Found-Darwin.aspx
 
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