News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Canadians Held In Australian Drug Bust |
Title: | Australia: Canadians Held In Australian Drug Bust |
Published On: | 2006-09-21 |
Source: | National Post (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-18 00:10:32 |
CANADIANS HELD IN AUSTRALIAN DRUG BUST
Cocaine, Ecstasy Shipped
Officials in Australia say they have bust a major international drug
syndicate involving five Canadian men after a routine check by customs
officers uncovered 135 kilograms of cocaine and 120,000 Ecstasy
tablets hidden in computer equipment.
A Canadian man was arrested while trying to get the drugs, Australian
Federal Police said early today.
Four others were detained in police raids across Brisbane, the capital
of the state of Queensland. An Australian man police said was
connected to the suspects was arrested in Sydney.
Police put the value of the cocaine at $30-million and said the
Ecstacy tablets were worth $3.5-million.
Customs chief executive officer Michael Carmody said it was a
sophisticated attempt to beat Australia's border controls.
"This operation has again demonstrated the value of customs container
X-ray facilities, which are located in all of Australia's major sea
cargo ports," Mr. Carmody said.
Australian agents were working with RCMP to break what is believed to
be an international syndicate, the police spokesman said.
Customs targeted the container for inspection at its X-ray facility in
Brisbane on Sept. 8.
The container -- which originated in Delta, B.C. -- held 420 computer
monitors.
Analysis of the X-ray images prompted customs officers to unpack the
shipment. Inside 33 of the monitors, officers discovered 136 sealed
packets of cocaine and 36 packets of Ecstasy tablets.
After the drugs were substituted for an inert substance, federal
police investigators identified the men allegedly responsible for the
importation and tracked their movements.
The shipment was the second seized in four months from Canada. The
first was the seizure of 1.2 million Ecstasy tablets in Melbourne in
June that resulted in four arrests.
Mike Phelan, the Australian Federal Police's national manager: border
and international network, called the seizure of two large
consignments of drugs from Canada in such a short period of time unusual.
The five Canadian men --ranging in age from 25 to 39 -- have been
charged with a number of offences, including importing a commercial
quantity of a border-controlled drug. A 62-year-old Sydney man has
been charged with two counts of conspiracy to import a commercial
quantity of a border-controlled drug.
The maximum penalty for offences of this kind is a fine of $825,000
and/or life imprisonment.
The suspects were to appear in court today.
The seizure is the largest interception of cocaine in Australia since
July, 2001, when nearly one tonne of the drug was seized off Western
Australia.
Cocaine, Ecstasy Shipped
Officials in Australia say they have bust a major international drug
syndicate involving five Canadian men after a routine check by customs
officers uncovered 135 kilograms of cocaine and 120,000 Ecstasy
tablets hidden in computer equipment.
A Canadian man was arrested while trying to get the drugs, Australian
Federal Police said early today.
Four others were detained in police raids across Brisbane, the capital
of the state of Queensland. An Australian man police said was
connected to the suspects was arrested in Sydney.
Police put the value of the cocaine at $30-million and said the
Ecstacy tablets were worth $3.5-million.
Customs chief executive officer Michael Carmody said it was a
sophisticated attempt to beat Australia's border controls.
"This operation has again demonstrated the value of customs container
X-ray facilities, which are located in all of Australia's major sea
cargo ports," Mr. Carmody said.
Australian agents were working with RCMP to break what is believed to
be an international syndicate, the police spokesman said.
Customs targeted the container for inspection at its X-ray facility in
Brisbane on Sept. 8.
The container -- which originated in Delta, B.C. -- held 420 computer
monitors.
Analysis of the X-ray images prompted customs officers to unpack the
shipment. Inside 33 of the monitors, officers discovered 136 sealed
packets of cocaine and 36 packets of Ecstasy tablets.
After the drugs were substituted for an inert substance, federal
police investigators identified the men allegedly responsible for the
importation and tracked their movements.
The shipment was the second seized in four months from Canada. The
first was the seizure of 1.2 million Ecstasy tablets in Melbourne in
June that resulted in four arrests.
Mike Phelan, the Australian Federal Police's national manager: border
and international network, called the seizure of two large
consignments of drugs from Canada in such a short period of time unusual.
The five Canadian men --ranging in age from 25 to 39 -- have been
charged with a number of offences, including importing a commercial
quantity of a border-controlled drug. A 62-year-old Sydney man has
been charged with two counts of conspiracy to import a commercial
quantity of a border-controlled drug.
The maximum penalty for offences of this kind is a fine of $825,000
and/or life imprisonment.
The suspects were to appear in court today.
The seizure is the largest interception of cocaine in Australia since
July, 2001, when nearly one tonne of the drug was seized off Western
Australia.
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