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The Australian/NZ Drug Busts Mega-Thread Part Triforce

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Media Release: Man charged for importing GBL

Media Release: Man charged for importing GBL

A 27-year-old Canadian national is scheduled to appear in the Cairns Magistrate Court today charged with importing approximately two litres of Gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) into Australia.

On 27 October 2011, Customs and Border Protection officers selected a consignment for examination at the International Mail Gateway Facility in Sydney.

The consignment had arrived from the Netherlands and contained two plastic bottles of liquid, labeled as floor stripper.

The package was examined and found to contain a substance which initial testing indicated to be GBL.

The matter was referred to the Australian Federal Police (AFP) where an investigation began.

The man has been charged with the following offences:

Importing a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, namely gamma butyrolactone, contrary to section 307.1 of the Criminal Code Act 1995. The maximum penalty for this offence is life imprisonment and/or a $750,000 fine.

Dealing in identification information with the intent of committing an indictable commonwealth offence, contrary to section 372.1 of the Criminal Code Act 1995. The maximum penalty for this offence is five years imprisonment.
GBL is known as a date-rape drug, also known as ‘fantasy', which metabolises into the drug gamma-hydoxybutryate (GHB) in the body. It can cause abrupt loss of consciousness, memory loss, respiratory difficulties, coma and death.

Further forensic testing will be undertaken to confirm the exact weight and purity of the substance.​

here
 
Five arrested, heroin worth $3 million seized - Drug Squad

Five arrested, heroin worth $3 million seized - Drug Squad

Drug Squad detectives and members of the North West Region Enforcement Squad have arrested five men and seized heroin worth $3 million during an operation targeting commercial drug supply in Sydney’s west.

Strike Force Vercoe was established by the Drug Squad in July this year to investigate the commercial supply of heroin.

Since then, police investigations revealed that heroin was being supplied from vehicles at various locations in Sydney’s west. More than one kilogram of high-grade heroin had been seized prior to today during those investigations.

About 10.30am today (Thursday 3 November 2011), detectives intervened in an alleged drug transaction in progress at Blacktown.

There they arrested a 59-year-old Blacktown man and additionally seized about 2kg of heroin with an estimated potential street value of $2 million. A large amount of cash was also seized.

A 50-year-old Penrith man and a 41-year-old St Marys man was arrested nearby, while a 48-year-old Kingswood man was arrested near Liverpool. A 46-year-old Cronulla man was also arrested at his residence.

Those arrested were taken to Blacktown, Cronulla and Liverpool police stations; however; one man was subsequently taken to hospital after suffering a medical condition at Blacktown Police Station.

The first four men are expected to be charged with offences relating to the commercial supply of heroin, with the Cronulla man to face charges of supply prohibited drug, relating to heroin and methylamphetamine, and fraud.

They are expected to face court in the morning.

Search warrants were also executed at properties in Kingswood, Penrith, Blacktown, Cronulla and Granville, with numerous items seized.

Today’s seizure brings the total value of drugs seized by Strike Force Vercoe detectives to $3 million.​

here
 
Bali boy begs judge to set him free

Bali boy begs judge to set him free

The court case of a 14-year-old Australian accused of buying marijuana in Indonesia has been adjourned until next Friday when a verdict is expected.

The boy's lawyer, Mohammed Rifan, says the teenager broke down as he begged the judge at Denpasar district court to set him free.

He apologised for all the trouble he has caused.

The 14-year-old was arrested early last month for allegedly buying marijuana on Bali's Kuta beach.

He could potentially face up to six years in jail unless his defence team can prove that he had a problem with the drug and is getting help.

Chief Prosecutor Gusti Gede Putu Atmaja says the boy's father told the closed court session that he and his wife brought their son to Bali to get him away from marijuana.

He said his son had been using marijuana for more than a year and vowed to take him into rehabilitation if he is free to return to Australia.

Earlier, the boy and his parents, covering their faces to avoid being identified, pushed their way through scrambling media with security guards helping to muscle their way to a specially set-up children's court.

Mr Atmaja said there may be verdict next Friday.

The prosecution's witnesses, including the police who arrested the boy, were at the court today to give evidence.

The boy faces three potential convictions - one of which carries up to six years in jail.​

here
 
[NZ] Woman tried to smuggle drugs into prison

[NZ] Woman tried to smuggle drugs into prison

A woman who attempted to smuggle a substantial amount of cannabis and cannabis oil to her son in Rangipo prison has been sentenced to jail today at the Rotorua District Court.

Shona Papanui was caught by drug dogs on October 31 last year with 20 grams of cannabis and three capsules of cannabis oil.

She was smuggling the drugs in for her son.

Justice McGuire told the court there was a great need for deterrents when dealing with drugs in prisons.

McGuire told Papanui he had no choice but to send her to prison and she received a sentence of eight months.​

here
 
Perth private school staff sacked over drug supply

Perth private school staff sacked over drug supply

Three staff members at a private boys school in Perth have been sacked over allegations they supplied drugs to students.

Police were called to Wesley College in South Perth last month after cannabis was found during a routine search of a dormitory.

Two Year 10 students told detectives they bought the drugs from a staff member for $75.

Officers raided the IT support officer's Como residence and allegedly found more cannabis, along with smoking implements.

He has been charged with drug related offences and is due to face court later this month.

Investigations are continuing into two others staff members.

The two students caught with the drug have been expelled from the college.

Wesley College Headmaster David Gee says the alleged actions are inconsistent with the school's mission and core values and the school has acted swiftly to address the issue.​

here
 
Two arrested in drug manufacture and supply operation - Asian Crime Squad

Two arrested in drug manufacture and supply operation - Asian Crime Squad

Police investigating the high-level manufacture and supply of drugs have arrested two people in Sydney’s south.

Strike Force Macartney was established by State Crime Command’s Asian Crime Squad in April 2011 to investigate a drug manufacture and firearm supply syndicate operating in Sydney.

It will be alleged the syndicate was manufacturing and supplying Ice throughout the Sydney area, and was also involved in illegal firearm supply.

A joint operation in August 2011 with the Australian Federal Police had resulted in the seizure of a large quantity of pre-cursor chemicals, used in the manufacture of ICE, which had been supplied from Melbourne to Sydney.

Three people were arrested and remain before the court on charges relating to drugs, firearms, proceeds of crime and participating in a criminal group.

Following further investigations, Strike Force Macartney detectives were today (Friday 4 November 2011) joined by officers from the Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad and Cabramatta Local Area Command for three search warrants about 11am.

Officers raided properties at Lansvale, Rockdale and Bexley where they found glassware and what’s believed to be a clandestine laboratory. It is currently being examined by the Drug Squad’s Chemical Operations Team.

A 35-year-old Wooli Creek man and a 31-year-old Yagoona man were arrested at Wooli Creek and taken to St George Police Station.

Both men have charged with possess precursor with intent to manufacture (large commercial quantity). The 35-year-old man was also charged with possess fraudulent document.

They have been refused bail to appear in Parramatta Bail Court tomorrow.

Further arrests are expected.

Commander of the Asian Crime Squad, Detective Superintendent Scott Cook, said Strike Force Macartney had built on the inroads made by the squad’s Strike Force Noise, which targeted drug trafficking and firearm supply.

“Strike Force Macartney has focussed on the manufacturers of prohibited drugs and those with cross-jurisdictional network contacts who we will allege were involved in the smuggling of pre-cursors for use in the manufacture of prohibited drugs.

“The method of concealment used by this syndicate, where pre-cursors were impregnated into fabric for transportation, is unusual and enterprising; however, police will continue to adapt to any new ways of smuggling used by criminals.

“The Asian Crime Squad will continue to work with local, national and international partners in order to deal with and combat drug manufacture and the supply of drugs and firearms in NSW by criminal syndicates and networks.”​

here
 
[NZ] Man charged for allegedly importing 'fantasy'

[NZ] Man charged for allegedly importing 'fantasy'

A man has appeared in court for allegedly importing more than 24kg of the class B drug Gamma Butyrolactone, commonly known as GBL or fantasy.

His arrest comes after Customs officers at the International Mail Centre, which is located in Auckland Airport, intercepted a package from Hong Kong, which was declared to contain cleaning products.

Analysis of the 24.24kg of liquid showed it was actually the party drug GBL, which would have an estimated street value of between $100,000 and $150,000.

Police have arrested a 31-year-old Invercargill man, who appeared in court yesterday charged with importation of GBL and possession of the substance for supply.

He was further charged with possession of methamphetamine.

Police Minister Judith Collins said the haul sent a clear message to people thinking about importing drugs: "you will get caught".

"This drug is a danger to our society and needs to be off the streets and away from our families," she said.

GBL has been a class B controlled drug since 2002. The maximum jail term for importation and possession for supply of the drug is 14 years imprisonment.​

here
 
Police arrest five people in relation to Sydney cocaine and ice seizure

Police arrest five people in relation to Sydney cocaine and ice seizure

Five people have been arrested in Sydney today by Australian Federal Police (AFP) in conjunction with Joint Organised Crime Group (JOCG) investigators regarding an attempt to import cocaine and ice (crystal methamphetamine) into Australia.

The JOCG unites the AFP, Customs and Border Protection, NSW Police, the NSW Crime Commission and the Australian Crime Commission in a joint taskforce targeting organised crime.

Four men aged in their early 20’s, together with a 27-year-old female are scheduled to appear at Parramatta Local Court today (5 November) after being charged with a range of drug-related offences including import a border controlled drug and attempt to possess a border controlled drug, contrary to provisions of the Commonwealth Criminal Code Act, 1995. The maximum penalty for these offences is life imprisonment.

Operation Copia began at Sydney Airport on 29 October when Australian Customs and Border Protection officers detected 24 kilograms of cocaine and 27 kilograms of ice concealed inside an 800kg piece of farming equipment that had arrived on a flight from Vancouver, Canada.

The drugs were divided into one kilogram blocks and bags and concealed inside the body of a tractor claw.

The estimated wholesale value of the seized drugs is $10 million.

Investigations are ongoing and police have not ruled out further arrests.

AFP spokesperson Manager Sydney Office Brian McDonald said Operation Copia is another successful result for the AFP & JOCG.
“This operation shows the AFP and its partner agencies are united in their commitment to combating organised crime and have the capability to target and shut down crime syndicates,” Commander McDonald said.

Customs and Border Protection Acting National Director Intelligence and Targeting, John Gibbon, congratulated all officers involved on the success of such an extensive joint response.

"This is a great intelligence driven result and demonstrates the commitment of all the officers involved to work together to achieve success," Mr Gibbon said.

NSW Police spokesperson Director Organised Crime Directorate State Crime Command Mal Lanyon said this result is a great example of the outstanding work and success that partnerships between State and Commonwealth agencies continue to achieve.

“NSW Police will continue to work with our partners to keep the community safe,” Detective Chief Superintendent Lanyon said.​

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Anatomy of a bust: the demise of a drug ring Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nation

The Golden Gun syndicate was one of the biggest drug groups broken by the NSW Police Force. As its last member is sentenced, Michael Duffy constructs a unique picture of the cocaine trade in Sydney.

TWO weeks ago former Versace salesman Michael Chard sat in the witness box in the Sydney District Court. He was explaining how his former client and drug boss Alen Moradian had spent what police say was more than $1 million on the company's furniture and homewares. In cash.

A lawyer asked if Mr Chard suspected Moradian, 37, was in the drug trade.

''At Versace we had many clients who paid cash,'' Mr Chard explained. ''We were trained not to ask and not to question clients.''

He said when he first met Moradian in 2005, ''he was very passionate about the brand and what it represents. He loved the Versace furniture and the excess. It was his vision and it was my job to carry his vision through''. Mr Chard later told Moradian he had been born in the wrong era and should have lived in 16th-century Italy.

The vision involved the transformation of the Moradian McMansion in West Pennant Hills into a palazzo. Soon trucks were arriving with richly decorated Versace furniture and antiques from Martyn Cook's shop in Queen Street, Woollahra. Mr Chard also handled the landscaping outside the house and arranged for an artist to turn the lounge room into a version of the Sistine Chapel, with a $40,000 ceiling mural showing sky and angels.

Moradian's fiancee and later wife, Natasha Youkhana, wasn't so keen on the vision at first, finding it a little heavy. In fact she found her man's whole attitude a bit over the top and once asked him in an email: ''Why do you just sit there and show off -

'I am the man, I am the man'? Do you see Tony Soprano doing that? … He doesn't care who people think is the boss, [money] is his number one priority. You, on the other hand, want the attention, you want the big head, you love it. People like that won't survive.''

But Moradian remained a strong member of what Mr Chard described as ''a beautiful relationship''. Mr Chard told the court: ''He's got a strength about him, he's got a very authoritative nature, [although] … he's got a very soft side, too.'' Moradian pushed his vision right through the two-storey house, replacing the shower screens Youkhana had installed with Versace screens and even redecorating the kitchen in his preferred black-and-gold colour scheme. Over time she came to appreciate the Versace vision, which Mr Chard said was typical of his clients: ''When they live with it, they come to love it.''

But the budget became a worry - even cocaine bosses don't have bottomless pockets, apparently, and all those little extras - such as the $9000 Versace bedspreads and $50,000 dining room chairs - were adding up. ''The budget was blowing out,'' Mr Chard admitted. ''We were decorating each room fully. Natasha was concerned about the cost and expressed this. All clients towards the end, when the budget blows out, a conversation takes place.''

But in July 2007, before the reno could be completed and before Mr Chard could get Moradian to commit to an $850,000 Versace-decorated Lamborghini (''You might like a Versace car to go in your Versace house''), the police pounced. Moradian is now serving a jail sentence of 16 years and nine months. Youkhana will be sentenced soon for her role in dealing with the proceeds of crime to the value of more than $4 million.

Eleven other members of the syndicate have also been convicted, making this one of the most successful busts of a drug group by the NSW Police Force and placing many details of their crimes on the record. These include multiple importations of large quantities of cocaine, widespread supply and dealing, and the possession of more than $18 million in cash, many assets and dozens of firearms.

Early this year the police asked The Sun-Herald not to publicise these facts until Moradian's partner Luke Sparos was convicted, which happened recently. We can now provide the most detailed picture of a Sydney cocaine group made public.

THE MOTIVE

Profit, lots of it. The syndicate was paying $30,000 a kilogram for cocaine in Chicago and selling it for $190,000 in Sydney. Police suspect about 700 kilograms were imported, although the quantity for which people were convicted is much less.



THE IMPORTERS

The cocaine was sourced from Chicago, which is a long way from Mexico (and Colombia) but is where the importers had contacts. The one-kilogram blocks had a high level of purity and were stamped with a rearing horses symbol, based on the Ferrari logo, used by one of the drug cartels. They were flown to Sydney via Los Angeles, addressed to business clients of a freight-forwarding company at Botany. A senior employee of the company provided the client names to the syndicate. When the parcels of cocaine arrived, hidden in shipments of saw blades and other items, he would process them through customs and arrange for their delivery, not to the legitimate clients but to the syndicate. For this he was paid about $3 million. We must call him Mr T, because he rolled over and is now in the witness protection program.

The original importers were Marius Rusu, 35, and Zolten Mato, 37. They imported six shipments of between 20 kilograms and 102 kilograms each, starting in February 2005. After 18 months they'd made so much money they stopped to concentrate on their limousine-hire business.

Moradian and Sparos, 30, (known in some circles as ''Fathead'' and ''Fatboy''), were not ready to retire but they had one problem. They did not know the identity of Mr T and it seems Rusu and Mato did not want to tell them. So, in October 2006 Moradian and Sparos hired a private investigator to find out the identity and location of Mr T. They then called on him and gave him $500,000 in a sports bag, persuading him to start working again. They undertook one big importation of between 40 kilograms and 60 kilograms of pure cocaine. Then the police moved in.



THE DEALER

John Youkhana, 35, of Newington, was one of a number of dealers who worked at the retail level for the syndicate. Police believe he made more than 70 sales a day, turning on his phones at 10am and working late into the night. He used coded language to arrange meetings with clients at places such as Krispy Kreme, McDonald's, KFC and Aldi. Transcripts of 734 phone conversations were tendered to the court showing Youkhana going about his business in a professional manner, telling one customer ''it's a bit hot in Miller at the moment'' - there were police there - and assuring another he didn't sell garbage because ''you can't run a business like that''. In fact, quality control became an issue, with Sparos asking why sales were slow and Youkhana explaining that the latest product was ''not as buzzy'' as the last lot.

Youkhana used other criminals to make his deliveries but faced human resource problems, telling one confidant: ''Everyone I put on is a f---wit and I can't trust 'em, and they make people wait one, two, three hours.''



THE GUNS

Like all dealers, John Youkhana was alert to the danger of being ripped off and kept a loaded Glock pistol in his bedside table and an automatic rifle and shotgun beneath the bed. Another syndicate member and dealer, Jason Johnson of Bonnyrigg, had an ArmaLite rifle in his bedroom and a Colt pistol in the garage where he conducted some of his business.

Moradian received a 5 per cent reduction on his sentence for surrendering a large number of firearms, including a machinegun, sub-machineguns and a grenade launcher to police. According to the judgment, these were delivered to his solicitor's office by unknown ''Middle Eastern fellows''. Moradian's lawyer described this in court as ''the most significant handing-over of weapons since the prime minister [John Howard] gave his gun amnesty''.



THE MONEY

Operation Schoale saw the biggest seizures of proceeds of crime in the state's history. Matthew Peisley, 40, was one of the syndicate's ''warehousers'' of money. When police raided his home near Wollongong in February 2007 they found $10,209,060 in heat-sealed plastic bags hidden in the roof. Peisley had the weapons needed to protect such a sum, including the gold-plated .44 Magnum Desert Eagle pistol that was to give the syndicate its name. According to documents tendered in court, Peisley lived a quiet life, his main recreation being greyhound racing.

When police raided the Bilgola house of Natasha Youkhana's sister Tanya, 33, in June 2007, they found $2,730,390 buried in the garden. The previous year Tanya had put $347,207 through bank accounts in her own name and her sister's, each deposit being just under the reportable amount of $10,000.

Clearly the syndicate was making so much money its leaders didn't know what to do with it all. Luke Sparos gave his wife Christine Saliba $861,740, which she variously deposited in the bank, stashed at home and spent on consumables, travel and their wedding. Another $200,250 was stored in shoe boxes in the flat of neighbour Ninos Georges, 32, who had his rent paid in return. When Sparos was arrested in February 2007 he was in a car with old school friend Ahmed Arja, who was helping him bring $821,700 from Brisbane to Sydney. (This seems to have been Arja's only involvement with the syndicate.)



THE TOYS

Rusu and Mato gave Mr T a lot of cash but they also gave him a gift - a Toyota Tarago purchased for $56,000 cash from Terry Hogan Prestige Cars. The men were good customers of the car company, spending $2.3 million there, mostly in cash. Each bought a Hummer for about $350,000 for Five Star Hollywood Limousines, which they owned with Mato's wife Christina, who was Rusu's sister. In Moradian's garage police found a Mercedes ML63 and two collector's GT Ford Falcons.

Police say Moradian spent more than $1 million on jewellery for himself and Natasha and bought his colleagues expensive presents such as Rolex watches.



THE POLICE

In December 2006 Operation Schoale was set up jointly by the NSW Crime Commission and the NSW Police Force. Most of the arrests and raids occurred in March the following year. Mr T rolled and gradually all the members of the syndicate, apart from Mato and Rusu, pleaded guilty. In their case the trial judge noted: ''There is no evidence of their contrition.''

When Moradian was still on bail, police figured he had far more money than they'd seized. They set up a neat sting operation in which some pretended to be corrupt and claimed they could get Moradian out of the country in return for a large amount of money. Moradian called his wife, who produced the bribe money and was arrested with $760,000 in garbage bags in her car.



VIOLENCE

According to a police source, Johnson was sent to America to burn down the house of someone who was causing trouble. He was kidnapped and held hostage in a basement until the syndicate paid $1 million for his release.

In December 2009 at the committal of Marius Rusu and Zolten Mato, the Crown requested that five prosecution witnesses be allowed to give evidence by video link in the forthcoming trials, as their lives were in danger. Mr T had received a letter saying:

''Don't be a f---wit, we kill our own.'' The magistrate refused the application. Mr T now resides at an unknown location and his life remains at risk.

When Moradian and Sparos first called on Mr T in 2006, his wife was worried and called a family friend, Gemahl Maika, to come over in case her husband needed protecting. Mr Maika later gave evidence about this incident. In April he was shot dead at his home in Glen Alpine. No one has been charged in connection with his execution.



THE SENTENCES

Marius Rusu 29 years and ninemonths.
Zolten Mato 30 years and threemonths.
Alen Moradian 16 years and ninemonths.
Luke Sparos 15 years.
John Youkhana nine years.
Matthew Peisley seven years.
Jason Johnson five years.
Tanya Youkhana, Christine Saliba, Ninos Georges and Ahmed Arja good behaviour bonds.
Natasha Youkhana and Louie Pucariello await sentencing.

http://www.smh.com.au/national/anatomy-of-a-bust-the-demise-of-a-drug-ring-20111105-1n0uw.html
 
Extreme money laundering

Why did thousands of dollars end up in a bath tub in a Bondi flat? Neil Mercer reports.

As court cases go, it had all the ingredients of a ripping crime novel. There was 100 kilograms of cocaine smuggled from Mexico into Sydney in grey stone pavers in February 2008.

There was an accused with a name from central casting - Ricardo Madrid - who was eventually found not guilty of cocaine trafficking.

There were hundreds of thousands of dollars literally being washed in the bubble bath of a Bondi unit and then put through the dryer.

Almost in passing, there was evidence about Terry Mullens, a Sydney racehorse owner and Parramatta Road luxury-car dealer who, in 2010, reportedly paid $15 million for a harbourside mansion. It was alleged that Mullens was involved in money laundering although he has not been charged with any offence.

Mullens hit the headlines earlier this year when he was the victim of an unusual crime. On July 7, 16 gun-toting and masked men turned up at his Burwood car yard and, just before 4pm on that Thursday, made off with four of his cars - a Porsche, a brace of Beamers and a black Range Rover. Mysteriously, the cars were returned in pristine condition the next day. A few days later, five Hells Angels, including the president of the Parramatta chapter, turned up and allegedly tried to extort money from him. Police arrested them on the spot and charged them with extortion.

While the jury in the NSW District Court case against Madrid did not hear anything about those incidents, it did hear that Terry Mullens knew an alleged member of the 2008 cocaine syndicate, Alberto Garza-Vazquez. It also heard evidence that Mullens was alleged to be a money launderer who charged a 10 per cent fee for "cleaning" dirty cash.
Ricardo Madrid found not guilty of trafficking.

Ricardo Madrid found not guilty of trafficking.

Some of Mullens's phone conversations with Garza-Vazquez, who goes to trial next year, were played in court, the result of an Australian Federal Police intercept on the latter's mobile phone.

(There is no suggestion that Mr Mullens was involved in the cocaine shipment and he was not called as a witness or charged with any offence. He told The Sun-Herald he could not comment on the case but insisted he was a businessman of good character, and stressed that a fraud conviction against him dated to an offence almost 20 years ago.)

The key witness against Madrid was Michael Hagge, a Canadian national who admitted his part in the importation and did a deal with the police in return for a reduced sentence. Hagge told the trial that Madrid was intimately involved in the syndicate to the extent that, in early 2008, he helped unpack the stone pavers from the container to remove the packages of cocaine from within them and then later took possession of about 10 kilograms of the drug.

Madrid's barrister, Michael Pickin, told the jury the allegations against his client were false and Hagge was fabricating a story to lessen his role and to get a lighter sentence. He said Madrid believed Garza-Vazquez was involved in property investments and played the sharemarket and he wanted to hide his cash profits from the authorities. To that extent, Madrid was involved in counting and handling large sums of cash but had no knowledge that it was the proceeds of cocaine. He was paid $1000 a week for his work.

In his opening address, Pickin said it would be alleged Alberto Garza-Vazquez was involved in drug trafficking and money laundering.

"You will hear phone calls of his dealings with other individuals … you will hear of an individual described as Terry Mullens and his dealings with Terry Mullens in his money laundering business," Pickin said.

Hagge told the trial that, in early 2008, he had gone to a Parramatta Road car yard with Garza-Vazquez and met Mullens. Garza-Vazquez had received a cheque for $81,000. Hagge told the jury he had asked what it was for.

Garza-Vazquez had replied: "It was for money that was clean."

Asked if Mullens had told him he was charging 10 per cent, Hagge replied: "No, he didn't tell me that. I think Alberto told me that."

Hagge told the trial he had been to the car yard three or four times to "pick up what Alberto told me to pick up".

In one of the intercepted telephone calls, on March 11, 2008, Garza-Vazquez and Mullens discuss selling a Mercedes. After Garza-Vazquez says he does not want to sell it for a couple of weeks, Mullens says: "All right then, mate, um, any time you're ready to go again, I'm ready, OK?"

Garza-Vazquez replied: "OK, no problems, I want to meet you for sell this truck [sic] with you and for other thing …"

The jury found Ricardo Madrid, who is married to an Australian and lives in Sydney, not guilty.

As for the cocaine, it appears about all but six kilograms was sold before the syndicate was arrested in March 2008. And the cash in the bath? The image was taken in a unit in Brighton Boulevard, Bondi. It was discovered after the AFP seized a camera during a raid.

Police found $695,000 in a bag in a bedroom in another Bondi unit.

There was no explanation given to the jury about why the money was in the bath.

Sources told The Sun-Herald it might be because it made it easier to feed the money into the cash-counting machine.

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/extreme-money-laundering-20111105-1n153.html#ixzz1csyiI1Dr
 
Two women's stories - How they became heroin addicts

Heroin use in women is up by 45 per cent since 2007. Two former addicts share their stories with Caroline Marcus.

SHE had a baby daughter to look after but teenage mother Lee Tilley was so worn down by an abusive partner she turned to heroin to escape a life she thought had no future.

Tilley was surrounded by drugs, her then partner mixing in bad circles, but she resisted heroin for a long time.

Only when her boyfriend began belting her to the point she had to be hospitalised, and the stresses of being a new -- and very young -- mother took their toll, did she turn to heroin.

At first she hated it; the lack of control and the fact she couldn't keep her eyes open, but the escape from reality proved addictive.

"The thing that appealed to me was I was escaping my reality which was controlling and abusive," she told The Sunday Telegraph. By the age of 20, Tilley was smoking heroin daily, dealing the drug and stealing from strangers to fund her habit.

Tilley, now 30, had what you'd describe as a normal, middle-class upbringing in Newcastle and Sydney, but her world was turned on its head at 16 after meeting a boy.

He became heavily involved in drugs and beat her.

She stuck with him for the sake of their daughter, Tayla, and because she had no self-esteem. When smoking heroin no longer provided the necessary fix, she began injecting, at first daily, then a few times a day.

"Once you have heroin, it's very easy to get addicted and it's not just that you want drugs, you get sick if you don't have it."

Tilley was imprisoned twice, but it was only when a judge agreed to grant her bail to attend a rehabilitation program that she broke her habit that spanned seven years on and off.

Daughter Tayla, now 11, said she was proud of her mother for turning her life around. "My mum means the world to me, I love her to the moon and back," Tayla said.

Tilley, who finished rehabilitation in September 2009, is now halfway through a Bachelor of Business degree and working full-time. At least 1.1 million Australian women used illicit drugs last year, an increase of 15 per cent on the past three years, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare's National Drug Strategy Household Survey.

About 15,000 women used heroin -- up 45 per cent from 2007. The use of cocaine, prescription drugs and hallucinogens like acid were also up.

At Odyssey House, where Tilley rehabilitated, chief executive James Pitts said the proportion of women to men had increased from 20:80 to 30:70 in the past 18 months.

The Salvation Army's NSW drug rehabilitation services for women have been in such demand, they have a waiting list for their 68 beds.

Both services say the increase could be due to women trying to emulate traditionally male substance abuse behaviour.

Trauma in childhood or adolescence, particularly sexual abuse, were also risk factors.

Like Tilley, 23-year-old Sally Bruce found a teenage romance with the wrong man a springboard into dangerous drug addiction.

"It all started so innocently. Once every three to four weeks I started using ecstasy, this then escalated to speed then ice," she said. "I started injecting ice or speed because my boyfriend was."

She was also dealing to help pay for the drugs, and was picked up by police three times for possession and deemed supply charges between July and December 2009.

Now, she is happily living with a new boyfriend, Michael, whom she met at rehabilitation and is hoping to work with children.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...e-heroin-addicts/story-e6freuy9-1226186697602
 
Narrabeen man to face drug charges

A NARRABEEN man has been charged with possessing the drug ice and could face charges of driving under the influence of a drug once the results of blood tests are completed. The northern beaches crime manager, Inspector Craig Wonders, said police saw the 21-year-old driving erratically on the Wakehurst Parkway at 2.30am yesterday, swerving across lanes and sometimes driving on the wrong side of the road. After being stopped by the police, the man returned a negative breath test. He was taken to Manly Hospital for a blood test. Police allegedly found two small bags of ice in the man’s possession.

http://manly-daily.whereilive.com.au/news/story/narrabeen-man-to-face-drug-charges/
 
Man charged after gun, knife and drugs located in vehicle - SCC MEOCS

Man charged after gun, knife and drugs located in vehicle - SCC MEOCS

A man has been arrested after allegedly being found in possession of a firearm, knife and drugs at Guildford earlier in the week.

On Friday 4 November 2011, officers attached to the State Crime Command’s Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad were patrolling the Guildford area as part of Strike Force Felix, which was established to investigate a spate of recent shootings in Sydney’s west.

About 2:30am, the officers saw a white Seat sedan travelling along Talbot Road before the vehicle pulled into a driveway on Station Street .

Police stopped and spoke to the male driver and his two female passengers where they discovered they did not live at the address or know anyone who lived there.

Police subsequently searched the vehicle and found a black bum bag hidden underneath the driver’s seat while an amount of photographic equipment was located in the boot of the car.

It will be alleged the bum bag contained a replica pistol as well as an amount of methylamphetamine (Ice) and ecstasy tablets.

The 32-year-old Bankstown man was also submitted to a search with police allegedly locating a folding knife on him.

He was arrested and taken to Parramatta Police Station where he was charged with two counts of possess prohibited drug and supply prohibited drug as well a one count each of possess prohibited weapon, custody of knife in a public place, goods in custody and drive while licence expired.

He was granted conditional bail to appear in Parramatta Local Court on Wednesday 7 December 2011.​

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OMCG associate charged after 100 ecstasy tablets seized - Auburn

OMCG associate charged after 100 ecstasy tablets seized - Auburn

Police have arrested and charged an outlaw motorcycle gang associate after he was allegedly caught with 100 ecstasy tablets at Auburn last night.

About 11pm, Saturday 5 November 2011, officers attached to Strike Force Raptor were patrolling Edgar Street, Auburn when they saw a silver BMW stopped at the intersection of Park Road.

At the time police will allege two men were seated in the vehicle with another man seen to be leaning through the front passenger side window.

Police stopped and searched all three men and allegedly found 100 ecstasy tablets hidden in the underpants of a 19-year-old man.

During a search of the BMW police also located a small amount of cannabis inside a plastic bag in the console of the vehicle.

The 19-year-old man, who police will allege is an associate of the Hells Angels Outlaw Motorcycle Gang, was arrested and taken to Auburn Police Station.

He was charged with possess prohibited drug and supply prohibited drug and granted conditional bail to appear in Burwood Local Court on Tuesday 29 November 2011.

Investigations into the ownership of the cannabis are continuing.

Strike Force Raptor was established by the State Crime Command’s Gangs Squad in 2009 and is a proactive, high-impact operation targeting outlaw motorcycle gangs and their alleged associated criminal enterprises.​

here
 
Agony from Olympian Nathan Baggaley's ecstasy

DISGRACED drug-dealing Olympian Nathan Baggaley has vowed to rebuild his shattered life after his release from jail in a fortnight.

The 35-year-old dual Olympic kayaking silver medallist, who has served four years for supplying and manufacturing 1509 ecstasy tablets, reckons his stint behind bars will make him "stronger and better".

"I always try to find and make a positive situation out of every negative. The greater adversity, the greater the rewards," Baggaley said in a letter to The Sunday Telegraph.

But he faces strict parole conditions. As well as undergoing regular drug and alcohol testing, Baggaley will be banned from joining sporting, surfing or youth organisations without permission from authorities.

At the time of his arrest in 2007 the elite sportsman was training for the Beijing Olympics and was just one day shy of flying to Hong Kong and Dubai for the world kayaking championships.

Baggaley, whose brother Dru still has three years to serve for the same offences, told the court at the time of his sentence that he was "foolish" for getting involved in drugs and for thinking "I could actually get away with it".

In a six-page handwritten letter sent to his lawyer just before his sentence in 2009, and obtained by The Sunday Telegraph, Baggaley says:

"I'm somewhat disappointed that I haven't heard from some of my fellow Olympian team mates, however I understand the difficult position it would put them (in) by getting involved."

He also talks of the horror of life behind bars for a high-profile inmate.

"I definately (sic) knew I was going to be treated differently from the very first day. I've been moved around to alot (sic) of prisons and everyone seems to know who I am before I get there."

To pass the time, Baggaley wrote that he would try to exercise using improvised items available in jail.

A member of the Baggaley family told The Sunday Telegraph that preparations were being made for Nathan's arrival home.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...aggaleys-ecstasy/story-e6freuy9-1226186474610
 
[NZ] Customs figures reveal dramatic drop in P-pill seizures

[NZ] Customs figures reveal dramatic drop in P-pill seizures

Customs seizures of tablets used to make the drug P have dropped by 64 per cent since 2009 - and by 55 per cent this year.

End-of-year figures are expected to be the lowest since 1997.

Officials say the dramatic drop shows efforts to control the P trade are succeeding.

Figures released to the Herald under the Official Information Act show that more than 1.9 million pseudoephedrine and ephedrine tablets - used to make pure methamphetamine - have been seized or intercepted by Customs staff this year.

This compares with 4.3 million last year and 5.4 million in 2009.

It is thought the drugs found this year could have been used to make between 88kg and 124kg of methamphetamine and cause harm to the country estimated at up to nearly $50 million.

Since 2006, a total of 19.5 million tablets - enough to make more than 1.2 tonnes of P - have been intercepted in 3743 separate incidents.

The street value of P is about $1 million a kilo.


Customs officials said they could not comment on the reason for the drop in the number of seizures.

"Customs works with a number of agencies on combating the illicit drug trade, but we can only comment with authority on the number and nature of drug interceptions at the border," a spokeswoman said.

"Individuals attempting to import illicit drugs can go to great lengths to conceal them," she said.

"Passenger and postal screening allows Customs to manage passenger and package risk, and prevent these illicit drugs getting across our border."

A Massey University study released in September showed methamphetamine use in New Zealand may be declining following the National Government's action plan to disrupt supply of the drug.

The plan included banning over-the-counter sales of pseudoephedrine.

Prime Minister John Key said in the TVNZ leaders' debate last week that the higher seizure rate of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine was proof that the plan was working.

Last year's Illicit Drug Monitoring System report found that the price per gram of methamphetamine had risen steadily, and the drug's availability and potency had decreased.

"We were aware that the Government had put in place its methamphetamine action plan over the course of 2010 and we were interested to see what impact that had," said Dr Chris Wilkins from Massey University's centre for social and health outcomes research and evaluation.

"There seems to be a case to say that the Government plan has been making an impact.

"Certainly that increase in the gram price is really unusual when you look at international experience."

Ephedrine and pseudoephedrine are Class B2 controlled drugs. The maximum jail term for possession of a Class B drug is three months' imprisonment and/or a $500 fine.

The maximum jail term for supply or manufacture of a Class B drug is 14 years' imprisonment.

NUMBERS

2011:

1,963,121 pseudoephedrine and ephedrine tablets seized by customs officers in 465 incidents

438kg weight of the tablets seized

88-124kg possible P yield

$49.9 million financial cost of possible harm to the community

Since 2006:

19,511,991 tablets have been intercepted by Customs in 3743 separate incidents. They weighed 4350kg and could have caused harm to the community put at $384.5 million.

SEIZURES THIS YEAR

* Auckland customs officers intercepted packages from the United Kingdom and Thailand containing individually sealed and wrapped packets of the class C drug ephedrine with a total weight of 8kg. The packages had been declared as "herbal scrub powder" and could have produced between 3.5kg and 4.9kg of P.

* Christchurch customs officers caught a man returning from Thailand with 217gm of pseudoephedrine in his shoes and bag.

* After a joint operation between customs and police, Tauranga man Gary Read was charged with importing ephedrine, conspiracy to import the drug, possession of ephedrine for supply, and possession of methamphetamine for supply.

* Police allege that a parcel containing 1.8kg of ephedrine was sent from Thailand to a Tauranga address and Read's daughter delivered the parcel to her father within an hour.

By Anna Leask​

here
 
malaysian woman charged with importing 1.5kgs of heroin

malaysian woman charged with importing 1.5kgs of heroin

A 27-year-old Malaysian woman has been charged with attempting to import approximately 1.5 kilograms of heroin into Melbourne Airport in her luggage.

She is scheduled to appear before Melbourne Magistrates Court this morning.

The woman was subject to a baggage examination by Customs and Border Protection officers after she arrived at the Melbourne International Airport from Kuala Lumpur yesterday afternoon.

During the examination, the officers noticed an inconsistency in the woman’s luggage. An x-ray revealed approximately 1.5 kilograms of a powdered substance concealed in the lining of her bag.

Preliminary testing of the substance indicated the presence of heroin. Further forensic testing will be undertaken to determine the exact weight and purity of the substance.

The matter was referred to the Australian Federal Police and the woman was charged with possession and importation of a marketable quantity of a border controlled drug, namely heroin.

The maximum penalty for this offence is 25 years imprisonment and/or a $550,000 fine.​

here
 
Drugs and precursors worth $135,000 seized - Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad

Drugs and precursors worth $135,000 seized - Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad

Five kilograms of a precursor used to make ecstasy and more than 300g of ICE have been seized by officers from the Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad’s Target Action Group.

Officers were patrolling the Punchbowl area last week and observed a number of alleged drug transactions in the vicinity of Arthur Street.

Police confronted a man at a nearby unit block about 3pm on Friday (4 November 2011) and allegedly seized five kilograms of precursor used in the manufacture of ecstasy (MDMA) and 327 grams of ICE (methylamphetamine) from a car parked there.

The seized chemicals are worth $100,000 and the ICE seized has an estimated potential street value of $35,000.

A 26-year-old man was arrested at the scene and taken to Campsie Police Station.

A search warrant was conducted at the unit with cash, drug paraphernalia and a further 46g of ICE allegedly seized.

A woman was arrested at the unit but was released pending further inquiries.

The 26-year-old man was charged with a number of drug possession and commercial supply offences, as well as goods in custody and conducting a drug house.

He was refused bail at Parramatta Bail Court yesterday to reappear at Central Local Court tomorrow (Tuesday 8 November 2011).

Inquiries into drug supply and manufacture are continuing.​

here
 
Truckie jailed after organising drug deal

Truckie jailed after organising drug deal

The Broome District Court has heard a drug-taking culture in the trucking industry contributed to a Derby man's decision to organise a $40,000 methamphetamines deal.

In May last year, detectives in the Kimberley town of Derby learned of a plan by local truck drivers to have a friend drive almost 30 grams of the drug from Perth.

Officers intercepted the delivery on the outskirts of Broome.

While Gregory Warner, 45, did not come into contact with the drugs, the truck driver yesterday pleaded guilty to organising the drug deal.

In court, Warner was described as a "piggy in the middle" who organised the drug deal to please friends, not to make money.

Warner was sentenced him to two and a half years jail with parole.

Detective Sergeant Graeme Johnstone says it is a good outcome.

"It's good to get any drugs off the street so we're very satisfied," he said.

The court heard Warner's drug habit developed through years in the trucking industry where amphetamines were commonly used to allow drivers to push on.​

here
 
Green campaigner cops cannabis fine

Green campaigner cops cannabis fine

A prominent environmental campaigner from south-west Western Australia has pleaded guilty to drug charges.

Simon Peterffy is a member of the Forest Rescue group and has been a vocal opponent of logging, land clearing and mining in WA.

He was last month handed a notice preventing him from entering the Perth CBD during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Yesterday, he pleaded guilty in the Bunbury Magistrates Court to possessing cannabis and smoking implements.

Police found the items during a raid on his South Bunbury home.

Peterffy was fined $700 and ordered to pay more than $300 in costs.​

here
 
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