Australia’s
Federal Police and Border Force are reporting the second largest cocaine seizure
ever made in South Australia arriving in a usual manner hidden inside luxury
buses being imported aboard a car carrier.
Police officials displaying their seizure said it was part of the continuing
flow of drug shipments and came a year after the largest-ever seizure in
Australian history.
“Cocaine
shipments are being seized at the nation’s borders at unprecedented levels as
Australia confronts a global surge in trafficking,” said Australian Border
Force Superintendent Andrew Dawson.
The
investigation began in January with reports that cocaine might be destined for
Australia on a car carrier bound for Fremantle and then on to Adelaide. The
police code named the operation Silkwood, tracking the unnamed car carrier.
The Australian Broadcasting Network is
identifying the vessel as the Gracious Ace, a Japanese-owned
vehicle carrier operated by Mitsui O.S.K. Lines. The vessel operates regularly
between Singapore and Adelaide with a stop in Fremantle. It has a capacity of
6,400 vehicles.
When the
vessel reached Fremantle on January 28, the police searched a shipment of 13
luxury buses. Dogs were used to sweep the buses and they reported finding a
total of 139 packages wrapped in plastic and hidden in various void spaces
inside the buses. The dogs signaled it was drugs and testing confirmed cocaine.
The vessel continued to Adelaide
where the buses were offloaded and stored. On February 3, they arrested two
men, aged 22 and 29, in a local hotel after they broke into the buses to
retrieve the packages. They appeared in court yesterday on charges of
“attempting to possess a commercial quality of cocaine.” They face a maximum
penalty of life imprisonment if convicted.
“This
seizure of the 139kg of cocaine has stopped a potential 695,000 individual
street deals from hitting our streets and causing significant harm to our
communities and economy, with an estimated street value of A$45 million (US$29
million),” said AFP Detective Superintendent Melinda Adam.
The
police are still investigating the crime and trying to determine the origin of
the drugs. They are also investigating possible “out of the ordinary” movement
in and around the port the day before the two men broke into the buses.