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Magistrate says VLAD laws can’t be used against an unnamed drug syndicate in landmark court ruling

A MAGISTRATE has thrown out VLAD charges against two men accused of growing a multimillion-dollar dope crop in underground bunkers, saying the anti-gang laws would apply to ‘Robin Hood and his Merry Men’ but not to a no-name drug syndicate.

The landmark court ruling that a crime group must have a name to be charged under the Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Act is the latest blow to former premier Campbell Newman’s controversial bikie laws, which are set to be watered down by the Palaszczuk Government when a review by retired judge Alan Wilson is handed down next month.

Ben Hannan and Nicholas Murrell were among five people charged by anti-gang squad Taskforce Maxima after shipping containers allegedly used to grow cannabis were found buried on two properties at Willowvale, in the Gold Coast hinterland, in March 2014. All are intending to defend the charges.

Hannan and Murrell were allegedly part of a syndicate whose profits bankrolled a lavish lifestyle including a waterfront mansion for Hannan and his wife, luxury cars and a portfolio of investment properties.

They were charged with drug trafficking, with circumstances of aggravation under VLAD which was introduced by the LNP in the wake of the 2013 bikie brawl on the Gold Coast.

The VLAD addition meant they faced an extra 15 to 25 years behind bars if they were convicted.

Lawyers for Hannan and Murrell challenged the VLAD aspect of the charge and yesterday Southport magistrate John Costanzo ruled in their favour.

Mr Costanzo slammed the VLAD law, including the words ‘vicious’ and ‘lawless’ which he said were not defined in the legislation and could not be used ‘to create or extend criminal liability’.

He said the law would apply to ‘a group of people who might decide to act like Robin Hood and his Merry Men’, a ‘small band of men holding to a defiant but valiant philosophy like the fictional Extraordinary League of Gentlemen’ or a named gang of 17-year-old graffiti vandals.

But the magistrate said the law could not be used against an unnamed drug syndicate or even a paedophile ring.

“This group to which Hannan and Hurrell belonged, although it was a group of three or more persons ... (who) associated illegally for the purpose of committing crime, was not called by any name,” Mr Costanzo ruled in a 39-page judgment.

“(VLAD) requires that the group calls itself by some name before it can qualify as an association.

“Otherwise, (it) would encompass any and every group of three or more people who commit even a single crime.”

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Solicitor Jason Grant and Nicholas Murrell leaving Southport Magistrates Court. Picture: Meagan Weymes


Mr Costanzo struck out the VLAD aspect of the charge and committed Hannan and Murrell for trial for drug trafficking only.

Their lawyers hailed the decision as a ‘landmark’, saying it was the first time a court had thrown out the VLAD laws.

Hannan’s lawyer, Adam Guest, of Guest Lawyers, said it was ‘another nail in the coffin’ for VLAD.

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Ben Hannan outside court.

“It gives some weight to the concerns about how the law has been misused by police,” he said.

“Obviously, VLAD was designed to deal with named criminal gangs, not just a group of people who commit offences.”

Murrell’s lawyer, Jason Grant, of Hannay Lawyers, said police had been trying to apply the law too broadly.

“Just because people are committing an offence together doesn’t make them part of a vicious and lawless criminal association,” he said.

Three others charged over the cannabis syndicate, including Hannan’s brother and wife, have been committed for trial with the VLAD charges still hanging over their heads.


Source: http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...g/news-story/2ae753284b7949275c36ea3f1e137af1
 
Drugs found after pursuit: NSW police

Drugs found after pursuit: NSW police

A man has been charged after police allegedly found $550,000 of ice on him after a 150km/h chase along a NSW highway.

Police say the 39-year-old motorbike rider from Bateau Bay led them on a chase near Wyong on Wednesday night, but was caught after hitting a gutter and trying to flee on foot.

He was arrested a short time later when police discovered more than 1.1kg of methamphetamine, with an estimated street value of $550,000.

The man is expected to face Wyong Local Court in April, charged with supplying a large commercial quantity of a prohibited drug, police pursuit and speeding.



Source: http://www.news.com.au/national/bre...e/news-story/a6482cbe4fd8a2a9bb8642113d677321
 
Cash, drugs seized in police raids on Gold Coast

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Drugs and weapons worth more than $2 million have been seized in raids on two Gold Coast properties, police say.

Police said about 90,000 ecstasy tablets were seized in raids on two Gold Coast properties.
PHOTO: Police said about 90,000 ecstasy tablets were seized. (Supplied: QPS)
Rapid action patrol officers raided two storage sheds at Varsity Lakes and Burleigh Heads and seized 90,000 MDMA pills with a street value of $1.8 million.

Police also found two guns and around $426,000 in cash.

Inspector Mick Stenner says the raids, conducted last Friday, may have saved lives.

"There's an incredible risk with having those pills on the street," he said.

"We know drugs like MDMA are responsible for destroying lives across Queensland and we will continue to target anyone responsible for distributing illegal drugs in our community."

Officers also seized 39 grams of methamphetamine, eight grams of cannabis, two guns and prescribed medication.

A 29-year-old Miami man today faced Southport Magistrates Court on several charges, including six counts of possession of a dangerous drug.

He was remanded in custody and is due to appear in court again next month.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-25/cash-and-drugs-seized-in-police-raids-on-gold-coast/7199322
 
Narcotics officers arrested on drug distribution charges in St. Tammany Parish

By Emily Lane, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on February 26, 2016 at 3:40 PM, updated February 26, 2016 at 5:59 PM

Two narcotics officers with the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff's Office face drug distribution charges after their arrests in January and Wednesday (Feb. 26) of this week, State Police said.

cont http://www.nola.com/crime/index.ssf/2016/02/narcotics_officers_arrested_ta.html

Karl Newman, a Tangipahoa sheriff's deputy, was arrested Wednesday (Feb. 24) and charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and abuse of office. Johnny Domingue was booked Jan. 18 on charges of principal to distribute schedule I drugs and conspiracy to distribute schedule I drugs.

State Police spokesman Doug Cain said the arrests of the deputies is the result of an investigation, which is continuing the agency launched after receiving information about a suspected drug distribution conspiracy. Cain said the crimes in question occurred in St. Tammany Parish, where the deputies were booked.

A third suspect, Rose Graham, who is not a law enforcement officer, was arrested in January along with Domingue. She is accused of distribution of 5.3 pounds of marijuana. She was booked on charges of distribution of schedule I drugs and conspiracy to distribute schedule I drugs.

Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Dawn Panepinto referred all queries about this case to LSP.

The Advocate reported Dominigue and Newman worked closely with a federal Drug Enforcement Administration Task Force, possibly as commissioned task force members.
 
Amsterdam drug dealers 'used crocodiles' to guard cash, police say

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A gang of suspected drug-dealers in Amsterdam used a pair of fully-grown crocodiles to guard their loot, police say.

Police investigating the gang made the unexpected discovery this week, when they arrested 11 suspects, men and women aged between 25 and 55.

They also seized 300,000 euros ($450,000) — the bulk of it locked in a cage with the toothy reptiles.

"It's very unusual for drug dealers to use crocodiles to guard their money," said police spokesman Frans Zuiderhoek.

"I think they thought it was safer."

The suspects, including the owner of the crocodiles, were due to appear before a judge.

Police also seized large quantities of synthetic drugs, firearms and half a million euros' ($765,000) worth of crystal meth in the haul.

The suspected dealers were delivering drugs to several hundred addresses, including to neighbouring Belgium, police said.

The crocodiles, for which the owner had a licence, were still in their cage and a friend of the owner was taking care of them.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-26/drug-dealers-used-crocodiles-to-guard-cash/7204642
 
Two men arrested after 18.5kg of cannabis found in car - Liverpool

Two men have been charged with drug supply after officers from the Firearms Squad found more than 18kg of cannabis in a car at Liverpool yesterday.

Police stopped the Toyota Kluger van in Macquarie Street, Liverpool, about 11.30am on Monday 29 February 2016 and located a number of vacuum sealed bags containing 18.5kg of cannabis in the rear of the vehicle.

Two men, aged 32 and 24, were arrested and taken to Liverpool Police Station.

They were both charged with supply prohibited drug greater than an indictable quantity and possess prohibited drug.

Both men were refused bail to appear at Liverpool Local Court today (Tuesday 1 March 2016).

http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/l...vdi5hdSUyRm1lZGlhJTJGNTI5MjguaHRtbCZhbGw9MQ==
 
Former Kings Cross drug king pin Bill Bayeh pleads guilty to hindering police

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Former Kings Cross drug king pin Bill Bayeh was found with a piece of paper that appeared to refer to a large quantity of drugs, when he was searched by police last year, court documents reveal.

On Tuesday Mr Bayeh pleaded guilty to one charge of hindering police over the February 2015 incident, allowing the full facts in the case to be revealed for the first time.

They show that the 56-year-old was sitting at the Five Burroughs Cafe in Potts Point about 7.45pm on February 12 last year when he was approach by police.

Following a series of convictions for commercial drug trafficking which saw him jailed for 15 years, Mr Bayeh was forbidden from entering Kings Cross unless it was for the specific purpose of attending his new business interest, the Love Machine strip club on Darlinghurst Road.

Believing Mr Bayeh was in breach of this condition, police took the 56-year-old aside and undertook a search.

The police facts reveal that, as they did so, Mr Bayeh removed a number of items from his clothing including a piece of paper which contained the words "1 litre to 3 litres" followed by a series of numbers which police said were "similar to a drug code".

When asked about the words, Mr Bayeh "immediately grabbed hold of the piece of paper and commenced to tear it whilst putting it behind his back".

"The accused was informed that he was under arrest for hindering police...[he] continued to tear up the piece of paper."

Mr Bayeh was subsequently charged with resisting arrest and hindering police, declining to be interviewed.

The matter was due to proceed to hearing on Tuesday, but following last-minute discussions between the defence and the prosecution, Mr Bayeh pleaded guilty to one charge of hindering police.

A second charge of resisting a police officer in the execution of his duty was withdrawn.

The 56-year-old will return to court for sentencing on March 10.


Source: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/former-ki...ilty-to-hindering-police-20160301-gn7636.html
 
Three men charged with drug supply offences - Taree

Police have charged three men, one with 70 alleged drug supply offences, following three search warrants in Taree yesterday.

Operation Carpet was established in November 2015 by officers attached to Manning Great Lakes Local Area Command, to target methamphetamine supply in the area.

Following investigations, about 11am yesterday (Tuesday 1 March 2016), Operation Carpet detectives arrested a 41-year-old Forster man at a shopping centre on Dunoon Street, Taree.

Police searched the man and his vehicle when they allegedly located an amount of methamphetamine.

He was arrested at the scene and taken to Taree Police Station.

Police will allege the man supplied drugs on more than 70 occasions from November 2015 to March 2016.

Meanwhile, three search warrants were conducted at a Taree business, and homes in Forster and Hallidays Point.

Illicit drugs including methamphetamine, cannabis and ecstasy; cash, and items alleged to have been stolen were located during the search warrants. They were seized for forensic examination.

A 46-year-old man was arrested at the Hallidays Point location, and a 25-year-old man was arrested at the business in Taree. Both men were taken to Taree Police Station.

The 41-year-old man was charged with supply prohibited drug over the indictable quantity, supply prohibited drug ongoing basis and supply prohibited drug (x70).

He was bail refused to appear at Taree Local Court tomorrow (Wednesday 2 March 2016).

The 46-year-old man was charged with supply prohibited drug over the indictable quantity; possess prohibited drug (x3), and receiving stolen property.

He was granted conditional bail, to appear at Taree Local Court on 15 March 2016.

The 25-year-old man was charged with supply prohibited drug and granted conditional bail, to appear at Taree Local Court on 15 March 2016.

http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/l...vdi5hdSUyRm1lZGlhJTJGNTI5NDIuaHRtbCZhbGw9MQ==
 
Mother, 26, dubbed the 'ice queen' because of her multi-million-dollar drug empire jailed for masterminding a vast meth syndicate

A woman dubbed the 'ice queen' because of the multi-million dollar drug ring she ran in north-east Victoria has been jailed.

Jessica Fogarty, 26, was left 'crying and shaking' as she was sentenced to seven years behind bars at Wangaratta County Court on Tuesday.

Fogarty, who has one child, was the ring-leader of a huge ice and cocaine syndicate that she ran from Wangaratta - a small town in Victoria near the NSW border, the Border Mail reported.

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She sat at the top of the syndicate supplying drugs to the small rural town, and also provided drugs to dealers in Sydney and Melbourne

Wangaratta is unofficially known as the 'ice capital' of Australia, where addiction to the damaging drug runs rife in the rural town.

From 2010 to 2014 Fogarty traded drugs and guns as part of her multi-million dollar ring, often settling debts with firearms.

During sentencing Judge Frank Gucciardo said that for someone who had built an 'empire', she was 'left with precious little at the end of the day'.

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According to the judge the 26-year-old had impacted the 'very fabric of the community' and her drug dealing was fuelled not only by greed but also her own addiction.

She had paid more than $1.3 million for 170-plus ounces of ice from a co-accused over 18 months, and was taking up to 3.5 grams of the drug per day herself, the court heard.

Fogarty initialy fell into addiction following an abusive relationship and a back injury that left her addicted to pain-killers, The Age reported.

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Her addiction was reignited after the birth of her child in June 2014, and the toddler is being cared for by her parents.

The 26-year-old was sentenced to seven years behind bars, with a non-parole period of four and a half years.

When handing down her sentence Judge Gucciardo said if she had not pleaded guilty and assisted with police investigations he would have considered jailing her for at least 14 years.

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...iled-multi-million-dollar-meth-syndicate.html
 
Men arrested at Evans Head over drugs, ammo haul

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Police have arrested two men at Evans Heads and seized methylamphetamine, cocaine, cannabis, steroids, ammunition, fake identification documents and cash following an operation in the northern rivers region.

Police say that as part of ongoing inquiries into the supply of drugs in the region, police stopped two men as they entered a vehicle on Riverview Street, Evans Head.

The men were searched, with one of them found to be in possession of 28 grams of methylamphetamine and more than $11,000 in cash.

The duo were arrested on the spot, before police executed a search warrant in a nearby residence.

Inside the home, officers found a further 280 grams of methylamphetamine, 11 grams of cocaine, six grams of cannabis, more than $3,000 in cash, fake driver’s licences and ATM cards, vials of steroids, and ammunition.

The two men, both aged 28, were taken to Lismore police station, where one of them was charged with numerous offences relating to commercial drug supply, drug possession and dealing in the proceeds of crime.

The other man was charged in relation to a Queensland Police warrant for armed robbery and deprivation of liberty.

Both men have been refused bail to appear in Lismore Local Court today (Wednesday).

http://www.echo.net.au/2016/03/men-arrested-at-evans-head-over-drugs-ammo-haul/
 
Hume drug lab: Man caught making MDMA in custody after guilty plea

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A 36-year-old Canberra man is behind bars after admitting to manufacturing a large quantity of MDMA at an industrial estate in Canberra's south.

The factory was discovered after an ACTEW inspector became suspicious of a chemical smell in the area around a building on Sheppard Street in Hume.

Stanley Hou, pictured here following a previous court appearance, has been taken into custody.
PHOTO: Stanley Hou, pictured here following a previous court appearance, has been taken into custody. (ABC News)
Stanley Hou was arrested in August 2014, after trying to prevent police entering the area where he was preparing a batch of the drug.

At the time the lab was discovered, neighbouring businesses in the industrial estate were evacuated and surrounding roads were closed as a precautionary measure.

Today Hou pleaded guilty to manufacturing MDMA, possessing 32 litres of a precursor chemical for making the drug and trafficking more than 70 grams of the drug.

He asked the court not to jail him immediately so he could put his affairs in order.

Hou had been on bail for some time in the lead-up to his appearance, as he was supposed to go to trial.

However, the trial was abandoned when he made a deal with the prosecution to plead guilty to three charges.

Several other charges were dropped.

Prosecutor Sarah Gul opposed the bid to continue bail.

"There's an inevitability of him being given a sentence of imprisonment," she said.

Justice David Robinson declined the request for extended bail.

The court ordered a pre-sentence report and Hou's lawyer said he would be asking for a forensic psychiatric report.

A relative in the public gallery became tearful, as he said his goodbyes and was taken away by corrections staff.

Hou's bail was revoked and he will be sentenced in May.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-03-02/man-behind-hume-drug-lab-pleads-guilty-to-drug-charges/7213918
 
Former Wythenshawe Hospital worker charged with stealing and supplying 'party drug'

Iain MacDonald, of Miles Platting, is accused of supplying a class C drug and theft by an employee

A former Wythenshawe hospital worker has appeared in court charged with supplying a party drug after stealing it.

Iain MacDonald, appearing before magistrates in Manchester, entered no plea after being accused of supplying a class C drug on July 23, 2015 - and theft by an employee between June 7, 2010 and July 22, 2015.

Mr MacDonald, 31, of Oldham Road, Miles Platting , is accused of taking gamma-Butyrolactone - known as ‘GBL’ - from Wythenshawe Hospital before selling it on.

The liquid substance has widespread industrial use and is a common solvent found in paint strippers, nail polish removers and stain removers.

But it is also used as a recreational intoxicant, with effects similar to alcohol.

An increasing number of revellers use the drug, which is closely related to notorious gamma-Hydroxybutrate - known as ‘liquid ecstacy’ or ‘GHB’.

GBL is converted to GHB after entering the body and has similar sedative effects.

Despite its legitimate use and sale in industry, supplying GBL is illegal.

The drug has become increasingly popular as a party drug.

Magistrates, deciding they were not equipped to deal with Mr MacDonald’s case, passed it up to the crown court.

Mr MacDonald will appear before a judge for a plea and trial preparation hearing at Manchester Crown Court on March 29.

He was given unconditional bail by magistrates.

http://www.manchestereveningnews.co...-wythenshawe-hospital-worker-charged-10978299
 
Ex-Santa Fe corrections officer gets probation in drug case

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A former corrections officer in New Mexico has been sentenced to three years of probation in a drug trafficking case.

Prosecutors say 21-year-old Edward Owens, of Santa Fe, was sentenced Wednesday in federal court in Albuquerque.

He was accused of participating in a conspiracy to distribute Buprenorphine — more commonly known as “Suboxone” — in August 2014 while he was a corrections officer at the Santa Fe County Adult Correctional Facility.

Owens allegedly agreed to smuggle 47 sublingual Suboxone strips into the jail in exchange for payment from an inmate.

Owens was taken into custody in February 2015 after being indicted in the case.

The inmate involved also was charged and was sentenced last October to 366 days in federal prison.

http://wdtn.com/2016/03/02/ex-santa-fe-corrections-officer-gets-probation-in-drug-case/
 
MCSO: Big heroin bust, two arrests follow traffic stop

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Marion County sheriff's deputies reported finding the "largest amount of heroin they have ever seen or collected" following a traffic stop on Wednesday.

Two people have been arrested in the case.

According to a Sheriff's Office news release, Tactical Investigation Unit detectives pulled over a 2009 Chevy Silverado for a window tint violation. A police dog "alerted" to drugs in the vehicle.

In it, detectives reported finding a pound and a half of heroin, marijuana, three firearms and drug paraphernalia.

Felipe Rodriguez, 40, and his wife, Stephanie Rodriguez, 32, were arrested on heroin-trafficking and other charges, according to the Sheriff's Office.

Detectives later searched a utility trailer belonging to the husband at 4701 SE Maricamp Road in Ocala and found two assault rifles. In the couple's home, at 3210 SE 45th Ave. in Ocala, detectives found $21,595, a 72-inch TV being used for surveillance and a 9mm handgun, the news release states.

http://www.ocala.com/article/20160211/ARTICLES/160219942&tc=ix
 
Resident of Wolseley Road, Point Piper, charged with running large drug operation

Wolseley Road, Point Piper, in Sydney's east, is the most expensive residential street in the country.

But - between the homes of models, barristers, judges and businessmen - Eric James Jackson has been running a large drug operation, police allege.

Officers raided Mr Jackson's home on Monday and allegedly found 126 grams of MDMA, 4.51 kilograms of cannabis, 139 grams of cocaine and 18 grams of ketamine.

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A large amount of cash was also found, reported to be $45,000.

Mr Jackson, 49, attended Kings Cross police station on Wednesday and was charged with drug supply offences and dealing with the proceeds of crime.

He was granted strict conditional bail in Central Local Court after he deposited $120,000 surety and agreed to report to Rose Bay police daily and abide by a curfew between 10pm and 7am.

Mr Jackson previously owned an excavation business registered to a unit in Bondi. He later moved to the waterfront unit complex in Wolseley Road.

The one-kilometre stretch of road has been home to model Jodhi Meares, car wish king Anthony Shahade, ANZ executive Gilles Plante, Aussie Home Loans founder John Symonds, James and Erica Packer, Westfield boss Frank Lowy, designer Charlie Brown and News Corp boss Lachlan Murdoch.

It boasts the third most expensive home in Australia, Villa Veneto, which was sold to dentist David Penn and his wife Linda for $53 million in 2010.

Three of the top six property sales in Sydney last year were on Wolseley Road, including the $39.9 million sale of Mandalay, the $39 million sale of Villa del Mare and the $28 million sale of another home.

Villa del Mare was forcefully sold after it was found to have been illegally acquired by Chinese billionaire Xu Jiayin.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull lives around the corner on Wunulla Road.

Mr Jackson will return to court on April 8.

His lawyer Chris Watson told Channel Nine that one of the charges relating to drug supply was an "over-charge" because it did not involve a commercial quantity.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/resident-...-operation-20160303-gn9igq.html#ixzz41oPHupLE
 
VIDEO: Police seize 108 cannabis plants near Nymboida

POLICE from Strike Force Hyperion have seized 108 cannabis plants in national park south of Nymboida this morning.

The drugs seized would have a street value of over $400,000, and form part of record haul from the strike force, with over $3 million worth of cannabis seized over the past three days.

As part of the strike force, the NSW Drug Squad, backed by Coffs/Clarence LAC and Police Air Wing, have worked from Bellingen up to Nymboida and Dorrigo as part of their annual cannabis eradication program.

Coffs/Clarence crime manager Detective Inspector Darren Jameson said the eradication was successful, despite being hampered by two days of bad weather.

"On cannabis, our message is clear: it is the root of all evil," Det Insp Jameson said.

"Some people in the community are trying to lift this evil up as acceptable, but the reality is it has a strong negative effect, it drives crime and leads the juvenile deliquency sector."

No arrests have been made yet, with the operation ongoing.

"If there's an opportunity to investigate those involved with these crops, we will," Det Insp Jameson said.

The plants will be destroyed, with the operation set to conclude this afternoon.

Grafton Daily Examiner
TOPICS: CANNABIS, COFFS CLARENCE LAC, DARREN JAMESON, DRUG BUST, MARIJUANA, NSW DRUG SQUAD, NYMBOIDA, STRIKE FORCE HYPERION

http://www.dailyexaminer.com.au/news/record-cannabis-haul-from-nsw-police/2950314/

:\
 
Father, daughter accused of dealing drugs to high school student in Fraser
By Nick Monacelli - Reporter
Posted: 4:42 PM, March 01, 2016

FRASER, Mich. - A father and his 18-year-old daughter are accused of selling drugs to at least one student at Fraser High School.

Martin Smith and his daughter Caitlin Smith were arraigned in 39th District Court Tuesday morning on felony charges of delivering marijuana.

Investigators believe Caitlin offered a sale and then called her father to bring the drugs. Martin then allegedly picked up his daughter and a friend from school.

“The father picked up the two and didn’t want to do the drug deal on the school site, so they drove to a nearby 7-11,” Fraser Police Lieutenant Mike Pettyes said. “He sold the drugs and then drove them back to the school.”

The incident occurred Feb. 9. Someone from the school saw what was happening and notified a school resource officer.

Both turned themselves into Fraser Police when asked.

However, Fraser investigators said Caitlin has been on their radar for a while, allegedly offering marijuana for $10 per joint to classmates.

“We were all dumbfounded, from the staff to the detective that handled the case," Pettyes said. “A father is really going to get his child from school to do a drug deal? We were all flabbergasted.”

In court, Judge Joseph F. Boedeker asked for Fraser Detective Lisa Pettyes’ thoughts on bond.

“Due to the fact that they’re delivering drugs to students at the high school, I’m going to ask for a high cash bond, no trespassing (at Fraser High School) and drug testing,” she responded.

Judge Boedeker granted her request, ordering a $50,000 bond for Martin Smith and $10,000 for Caitlin Smith. He also granted the no trespassing and drug testing requests.

Caitlin Smith is no longer a student at Fraser High School, telling the Judge, “I’m doing online credit recovery.”

After their arraignments, defense attorney James Sullivan said it was too early to comment on the case.

cont http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/father-daughter-duo-accused-of-dealing-drugs

.......................................

Hate to break it to the world but YAWN. Hope the poor bastards don't get lynched. What idiots.

I'm so glad there will be no grass smoking young adults at this school. Lol. Not even the narc cop who set this up thinks anything positive will come from this.. well further funding for them. TRUE
 
Last edited:
Father, daughter accused of dealing drugs to high school student in Fraser
By Nick Monacelli - Reporter
Posted: 4:42 PM, March 01, 2016

FRASER, Mich. - A father and his 18-year-old daughter are accused of selling drugs to at least one student at Fraser High School.

Martin Smith and his daughter Caitlin Smith were arraigned in 39th District Court Tuesday morning on felony charges of delivering marijuana.

Investigators believe Caitlin offered a sale and then called her father to bring the drugs. Martin then allegedly picked up his daughter and a friend from school.

“The father picked up the two and didn’t want to do the drug deal on the school site, so they drove to a nearby 7-11,” Fraser Police Lieutenant Mike Pettyes said. “He sold the drugs and then drove them back to the school.”

The incident occurred Feb. 9. Someone from the school saw what was happening and notified a school resource officer.

Both turned themselves into Fraser Police when asked.

However, Fraser investigators said Caitlin has been on their radar for a while, allegedly offering marijuana for $10 per joint to classmates.

“We were all dumbfounded, from the staff to the detective that handled the case," Pettyes said. “A father is really going to get his child from school to do a drug deal? We were all flabbergasted.”

In court, Judge Joseph F. Boedeker asked for Fraser Detective Lisa Pettyes’ thoughts on bond.

“Due to the fact that they’re delivering drugs to students at the high school, I’m going to ask for a high cash bond, no trespassing (at Fraser High School) and drug testing,” she responded.

Judge Boedeker granted her request, ordering a $50,000 bond for Martin Smith and $10,000 for Caitlin Smith. He also granted the no trespassing and drug testing requests.

Caitlin Smith is no longer a student at Fraser High School, telling the Judge, “I’m doing online credit recovery.”

After their arraignments, defense attorney James Sullivan said it was too early to comment on the case.

cont http://www.clickondetroit.com/news/father-daughter-duo-accused-of-dealing-drugs

.......................................

Hate to break it to the world but YAWN. Hope the poor bastards don't get lynched. What idiots.

I'm so glad there will be no grass smoking young adults at this school. Lol. Not even the narc cop who set this up thinks anything positive will come from this.. well further funding for them. TRUE

Reminds me of Ricky and Trinity in Trailer Park Boys lol
 
US agents busted $2 million of cocaine in Florida, and it may be the latest shipment

US agents busted $2 million of cocaine in Florida, and it may be the latest shipment from a growing drug hotspot

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Field Operations officers from US Customs and Border Protection intercepted about 154 pounds of cocaine last month hidden on a ship arriving at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

The size and value of the seizure are significant in their own right. However, the fact that the vessel was arriving from Guayaquil, Ecuador, is a sign of how that South American nation, nestled between Colombia and Peru on the Pacific coast, has become a major hub of cocaine trafficking.

Other operations in recent weeks illustrate how Ecuador has become an embarkation point for cocaine from the Andean region of South America.

In early February, the Ecuadorian government announced that a ship flying the country’s flag had been stopped off the coast of Central America and found to be carrying nearly 1,800 pounds of cocaine.

Later in February, the Ecuadorian government reported that it had dismantled a criminal organisation in Santa Elena, on the country’s central Pacific coast, that had been sending drugs via ship to Central America. During the operation, named Operation Sea Witch, authorities recovered more than 1,400 pounds of cocaine.

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Drug seizures and arrests also indicate that the expansion of trafficking operations in Ecuador has been taking place for several years.

“One of the largest increases in cocaine seizures in the past five years has been observed in Ecuador, where the amount of cocaine seized rose by over 242 per cent, amounting to 50 metric tons in 2014,” the UN’s International Narcotics Control Board wrote in its latest report.
In the first two months of 2015 alone, there was a fivefold increase in seizures of illegal drugs compared to the same period the previous year.

In late 2012, a former Ecuadorian military intelligence official (who has clashed with the current government) said the previous seven years had seen a 90% increase in the number of sea drug-trafficking routes.

And over the last three years, plying those trafficking routes has taken a heavy toll on Ecuadorian fishermen: At least 300 of them have been taken into custody in the US, Colombia, and Guatemala on drug-trafficking charges over that span, according to a report from Ecuadorian news site El Comercio, cited by Insight Crime.

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Ecuador’s proximity to Colombia and Peru — two of the world’s largest producers of cocaine — has helped facilitate its rise as a narcotics-transshipment point; that rise has been assisted by powerful criminal organisations as well as the underpreparation of Ecuador’s security forces.

Members of left-wing guerrilla group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have been moving Colombian cocaine into Ecuador for some time.

Colombian criminal groups are also heavily involved in trafficking through Ecuador, and at least one group, Los Rastrojos, is believed to have a permanent setup in the country.

Mexican drug traffickers are also present in Ecuador’s coastal areas, according to Insight Crime.

Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán’s Sinaloa cartel has extensive ties to Colombian cocaine production, including a relationship with the paramilitary drug trafficking group Los Rastrojos, and Sinaloa operatives have been arrested in Ecuador in the past.

The growth in maritime trafficking out of Ecuador is likely the result of a confluence of factors within the country, including high difficulty finding work for youths between 15 and 24 years old and heavy overfishing in the sea surrounding Ecuador that forces fishermen to seek out other ways to make money.

Increased cocaine production in both Colombia and Peru has also fed Ecuador’s sea-going narcotics industry.

In 2014, Colombian was the world’s leading producer, and growers there planted 44% more coca, the plant from which cocaine is made, than they did in 2013.

The country as a whole produces more of the crop than second-place Peru and third-place Bolivia combined, according to The Washington Post.

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The recent increase may be due to FARC rebels pushing out their supply in order to cash in on aid offered through the voluntary eradication pacts made during peace talks with the government, which could be a positive sign for the demobilization of Colombia’s largest rebel group.

Peru has also vied with Colombia for the top cocaine-producing spot, and while Peruvian coca producers ship much of their crop east through Bolivia or from their own Pacific ports, some of it likely makes its way through Ecuador.

Of the cocaine seized in the US in 2014, “approximately 90 per cent … was of Colombian origin, while approximately 10 per cent was sourced to Peru, the highest percentage in at least a decade,” the DEA reported in its 2015 National Drug Threat Assessment, adding that most Peruvian cocaine headed to European or Asian markets.

Almost 90% of the cocaine that makes it to the US is transported through the Mexican/Central American corridor, the DEA noted.

Caught between powerful traffickers and a dearth of legitimate opportunities, Ecuadorian fishermen often find themselves in a dangerous spot.

“If you get involved in [drug trafficking], you will make a lot of money, but afterwards, there are only two ways out: You get killed or you go to jail,” an Ecuadorian fishermen who had a run-in with drug smugglers told Mexican newspaper El Universal in 2014.


Source and video: http://www.businessinsider.com.au/cocaine-seized-in-florida-from-trafficking-hub-ecuador-2016-3
 
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