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The NT Drug News Vault

We hope to use this blog to archive as many media stories on illicit drug issues in the Northern Territory of Australia as possible. It will become a valuable resource for drug policy reform and human rights activists in the NT. If you come across any NT drug stories in the media, please let us know.

Monday, February 28, 2005

"Ice" not a nice vice

I READ with disgust of the lenient sentencing of Robert Ewin Chin by Justice Dean Mildren in the NT Supreme Court earlier this month.


Chin was found with 107.8g of “ice”, being a commercial amount of the most pure form of amphetamine. Due to the amount, the judge stated that Chin is a drug supplier. Given the amount there is no doubt of that.


Amphetamine is the most destructive drug in our society causing misery, destruction and crime.


Chin cried “poor bugger me I’m an addict” and has to serve just 28 days’ jail.


Give me a break.


Is that what the peddlers of death receive?


I pray the Director of Public Prosecutions appeals this lenient sentence. The community deserves better than that.


Name and address withheld by request


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 28th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Name and address withheld by request
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Bikies made me do it

A teenager told police he killed two Thai prostitutes as a "favour" for the Hells Angels outlaw motorcycle gang, a Darwin court heard yesterday.


Ben William McLean said he owed the gang $50,000 and they'd threatened to kill him unless he removed the two women from Darwin's streets.


"They said that they will knock me off unless I do them a favour, to repay the money," McLean told police after his arrest, in an interview played to the court yesterday.


"What was the favour?" police asked in the tape. " They said I had to kill them."


McLean and friend Phu Ngoc Trinh, both 19, are on trial in the NT Supreme Court over the drowning murders of the two women in the crocodile-infested Adelaide River southeast of Darwin last year.


The floating bodies of 58-year-old Phuangsri Kroksamrang and 27-year-old Somjai Insamnan were found by crocodile-spotting tour operators in the river.


The court was told McLean told police Trinh had agreed to help him kill the women after he was approached in a Darwin pub by two Hell's Angels bikies two months earlier.


The men had shown him photos of the women and told him their names.


"I was using speed and I ripped them off," McLean told police, explaining why he did what they wanted.


However, prosecutor Rex Wild, QC, has previously told the jury to disregard any suggestion the Hells Angels had anything to do with it.


He told the jury in his opening that the defence had admitted it was an "untrue story".


The court heard yesterday McLean told police Trinh had brought the women to his parent's farm in rural Darwin, where Trinh then had sex with both women and McLean had sex with the younger of the two.


The teenagers then bound their ankles and wrists with cable ties.


McLean said neither screamed but one resisted and he held her in a "hug" before both were placed in the back of Trinh's family's van.


McLean said he drove to the Adelaide River while Trinh strangled or suffocated the women in the back, the court heard.


"We pulled over and went to dump them off the bridge ... they were already dead," he said.


The trial continues.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 26th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Karen Michelmore
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Friday, February 25, 2005

Teen threw prostitutes off bridge to clear drug debt, court told

A Darwin teenager charged with murder has admitted in a police interview to binding the ankles and wrists of two sex workers before throwing them into a river.


Ben William McLean and Phu Ngoc Trinh have both pleaded not guilty to killing two women whose bodies were found floating in the Adelaide River, south-east of Darwin.


Today in the Northern Territory Supreme Court, a police interview with one of the accused was played to the jury.


In the interview, McLean said he was in trouble with the Hells Angels and had to settle a $50,000 drug debt.


He said he had used speed and had ripped them off.


The court heard McLean met two men at a Darwin hotel and was told to get the two prostitutes off the streets.


McLean said he and Trinh had sex with the two women before binding their wrists and ankles with cable ties and attaching car batteries to their bodies.


McLean said neither woman screamed.


McLean said he drove to the river with Trinh and dropped the women's bodies of a bridge one by one.


The prosecutor, Rex Wild QC, had previously told the jury to disregard any suggestion that the Hells Angels had anything to do with the murders.


The trial continues.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 25th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Drugs war far from won

I HAD to laugh when I read claims that the war on drugs has been won in Darwin.


It's unfortunate that in any community there will be drug users who are never going to go away. There will always be that demand in the market and ways will be found to bring drugs in.


If anyone believes it's harder to buy drugs in Darwin since the "tough stance on drugs" then, I'm sorry, but you're not in the real world.


Drugs are just as easy to purchase in the Territory now as ever. In fact, there's more choice for the drug users.


The difference now is that instead of buying pot from little old ladies in Humpty Doo, or speed from your local not-too-smart chemistry student dropout, drug users are able to purchase a much larger array of chemicals from much more sinister entities.


Sarah Kate (Surname withheld)
Darwin


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 25th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Sarah Kate (Surname withheld)
Email: ntnmail@newsltd.com.au
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au

Thursday, February 24, 2005

NT copper in chopper air chase

A policeman said last night he was dragged beside a speeding vehicle as he tried to arrest a suspected drug runner.


Sergeant Peter Lindfield later used a helicopter to stop the man.


"I was a bit shocked by it all -- but these things happen," he said.


Sgt Lindfield escaped without injury.


The drama began when police set up a routine traffic stop to catch alcohol and drug smugglers from entering the dry remote community of Ngukurr, about 300km east of Katherine, on Monday.


A four-wheel-drive was pulled over 12km from the community.


When Sgt Lindfield explained to the male driver that the vehicle would be searched for drugs and alcohol, he started the ignition.


The policeman reached in to get the keys out of the ignition and the driver grabbed his hand and sped off.


"I realised I was in danger," Sgt Lindfield said. "My feet could have easily got caught under the vehicle.


"I tried to steer the vehicle into the bushes with my free hand because he had hold of my other hand.


"But he was accelerating rapidly ... so I pushed myself away."


The driver raced towards Numbulwar with an Aboriginal Community Police Officer following his dust trail.


Sgt Lindfield commandeered a Telstra helicopter parked at the police station and chased him by air.


The chopper hovered low in front of the 4WD about 40km from Numbulwar and the driver gave up.


"It was very satisfying to catch the offender -- there's no way we could have done it without the helicopter," Sgt Lindfield said.


The driver was due to face Katherine Magistrates Court yesterday.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 24th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Greg McLean
Email: ntnmail@newsltd.com.au
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Youths driven 1000km in police cage

Civil rights and legal advocates have been angered by the cruel treatment of four Aboriginal teenagers, who were driven 1000 kilometres in the rear steel cage of a police wagon at high speed without breaks.


The four were detained by police on the weekend of February 12-13 in Borroloola, in the Gulf of Carpentaria, and taken to the Don Dale Juvenile Detention Centre in Darwin. Police claim that an aircraft was not available.


The youths where driven at speeds of 100 km/h, without seatbelts and without stopping, along one of the most dangerous highways in the Northern Territory. One of those detained, Wesley McDinny, told ABC News that they where all scared for their lives and only given dirty blankets.


Lawyers from the North Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service have lodged complaints with the territory ombudsman and the police commissioner over the treatment of the youths. NAALAS president Natalie Hunter told ABC News on February 15 that the removal of young people from their communities and travelling large distances was unnecessary and harmful. “We have bush courts that happen out in the community and not only that, we also have video link-up and telephone link-up with the Magistrates Court. So to bring clients in, thousands of miles in, to deal with it and just no way of getting home, no transportation, we’re just creating itinerants here, in the Darwin community.”


Police claim they followed all the correct procedures. When asked by the ABC’s The World Today program whether seatbelts should be fitted in the cages of police wagons a police spokesperson replied, “You’ve got to be kidding”.


This incident is not an isolated one. Prisoners in NT jails are regularly carted long distances by road in the back of police wagons.


Newshawk: http://darwin.indymedia.org
Pubdate: 23rd February 2005
Source: Green Left Weekly (Australia)
Author: Jon Lamb
Copyright: 2005 Green Left Weekly
Contact: glw@greenleft.org.au
Website: http://www.greenleft.org.au

Speed factory busted

Uniformed police tipped off the drug squad to an alleged drug manufacturer.


A general patrol attended a house at Gray, in Palmerston, on Monday evening for an unrelated matter and noticed what they thought to be ingredients needed in the manufacture of amphetamines.


The contacted the drug squad and the house was raided several hours later.


During the search police found glassware and chemical precursors required to make amphetamines. There was a primary ingredient for the manufacture of amphetamines that was undergoing the first stage of conversion into methylamphetamine.


A 51-year-old man and a 22-year-old woman were arrested.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 23rd February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Tuesday, February 22, 2005

Pearson solution

WHILE not generally in favour of compulsion, education is different, therefore I have some sympathy for the views of Patricia Nelson ("Lesson for life", Northern Territory News, February 14).


But life is a continuum - it does not end with the end of primary school so there must be some purpose in education.


Many of our citizens face a future of living in an artificial environment with life support provided, sitting around smoking ganja, drinking kava or alcohol, or finding outlets for their energies in anti-social behaviour.


This Government, and all previous governments, have adopted an out-of-sight out-of-mind approach to this problem - for example, sending the long-grass dwellers back to their overcrowded lands.


The solution lies in a more ecological approach to what is more than a social problem.


Some indigenous leaders, such as Noel Pearson, are trying to deal with this problem but most of our political leaders have abdicated their responsibilities.


Col Friel
Alawa


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 22nd February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Col Friel
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Saturday, February 19, 2005

No high from sniff of new petrol

Lives will be saved by the introduction of a new fuel designed to combat petrol sniffing, a member of a Territory indigenous community said yesterday.


The new fuel, which was launched yesterday, contains no lead and has only very low levels of the aromatic hydrocarbon that gives petrol sniffers their “high”.


Janet Inyika from the Alice Springs-based Ngaanyatjaarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (NPY) Women’s Council said the fuel will have an immediate impact on reducing petrol sniffing and save lives.


“Petrol sniffing is a huge problem in our communities,” she said through an interpreter.


“We think if suddenly sniffable petrol is not available… the addicts are not going to want to sniff it, and even if they do try, nothing’s going to happen and there’s going to be an immediate improvement in what is a terribly bad problem.


“Of course, we have a number of different kinds of sniffers [and] some of them are already seriously ill and have permanent disabilities… nothing is going to help those.


“But the new recruits – well there are going to be no new recruits, we hope, with this new fuel.”


The fuel, known as Opal and developed by BP, is currently being supplied to 37 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Communities at a comparable price to normal unleaded petrol.


Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott said petrol sniffing was a serious problem that had caused more than 100 deaths in indigenous communities since 1981.


The Government will spend $1 million a year supplying the fuel to remote communities where petrol sniffing is a problem but Mr Abbott yesterday rejected calls to supply the petrol right across Central Australia.


“I can understand why people would like to do that but the issue becomes where do you stop,” Mr Abbott said.


“We can’t convert the whole of Australia’s petrol supplies to Opal.”


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 19th February 2005
Author: Lauren Ahwan
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Addict jailed for spate of thefts

A morphine addict who went into people’s yards and stole more than $5600 worth of tools and an outboard motor has been sentenced to 10 months’ jail.


Timothy Bruce Howes was already serving a seven-month sentence for breaching a home detention order, Darwin Magistrates Court heard.


“You have been a thief and burglar for a decade,” Magistrate Greg Cavenagh told Howes. “Your offences were brazen and outrageous, and the citizens of Darwin would be outraged if you did not go to jail for several months.”


Mr Cavenagh backdated the latest sentence to December 2 to account for time in custody and said Howes might get parole on some of the seven months remaining on the other sentence.


He would have given Howes a longer sentence but for him inviting police to interview him in jail and “fessing up” to the stealing offences, to which he pleaded guilty.


Some of the tools were recovered but Mr Cavenagh ordered restitution totalling $3375.


He also imposed fines of $1250, with victim levies of $120 on traffic charges and $500 with a $40 levy for possessing morphine in a public place.


Those fines will be “cut out” in jail.


Howes, 42, also pleaded guilty to several driving charges and three charges of unlawful use.


One of these involved taking a Holden sedan to Queensland, depriving the owner of it for 34 days.


The court heard Howes served three months in Queensland for taking stolen goods (the utility) into that state.


The offences occurred between June 12 and 27 July 2003, Howes selling most of the stolen goods cheaply to buy morphine.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 19th February 2005
Author: Bob Watt
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Pot grower stole power

Police discovered a man dodging power bills during a drug raid on a Territory house.


Drug squad members executed a warrant on a house at Palmerston, where they confiscated both cannabis and amphetamines.


During the raid they found the owner also had allegedly interfered with the power meter.


A hydroponic system and a mature cannabis plant were seized.


Police inspected the meter and a device had been allegedly attached to the equipment.


A 29-year-old man was summonsed for cultivating and possessing cannabis, possession and use of methamphetamines and stealing electricity.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 19th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Remote area drug bust

Police made a drug bust on a remote Territory road.


Remote Community Drug Desk members searched a bag belonging to a 19-year-old man who was en route to the Numbulwar Community on Thursday.


A parcel containing a quantity of cannabis and 17 empty ziplock bags were confiscated and the offender was issued with an infringement notice.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 19th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Friday, February 18, 2005

The World Today - Oil industry modifies its fuel to combat petrol-sniffing

ELEANOR HALL: There's new hope today for remote indigenous communities fighting the curse of petrol sniffing that kills or debilitates so many young people every year. The oil industry has produced a fuel that contains none of the aromatic hydrocarbons or lead that give petrol sniffers a high.


And the Federal Government is subsidising the fuel's distribution to communities throughout Central Australia. But one health organisation in Alice Springs is challenging the Government to bring in the new fuel right through inland Australia.


Anne Barker reports.


ANNE BARKER: Aboriginal people in Central Australia have been sniffing petrol for decades.


The lead and aromatic hydrocarbons in fuel give them a sense of wellbeing and relieve the boredom and despair of a life too often marred by unemployment, poverty and ill health.


But the very components that give sniffers a high will eventually cause irreversible brain damage, and in Central Australia alone there are now at least 20 such people in constant institutional care, with no hope left of a normal life.


Today health workers like Blair McFarland in Alice Springs are pinning their hopes on a new type of fuel that can't be sniffed at all.


BLAIR MCFARLAND: It doesn't have in it the substances that make it able to be sniffed, and so kids just can't sniff it and can't get high.


ANNE BARKER: Is it still effective as a fuel?


BLAIR MCFARLAND: Yep, independent trials have indicated that it's absolutely fine as a replacement for normal fuel, and it runs fine in cars and in whipper-snippers and outboard motors and everything.


ANNE BARKER: The oil company BP has developed the fuel called 'Opal' specifically for Indigenous communities. And today it's releasing the first batch from its refinery in Adelaide, destined for remote communities in South Australia and the centre.


But at 30 cents more a litre than normal petrol its distribution can only succeed with a government subsidy. And while the Commonwealth has agreed to subsidise the cost for 35 Indigenous communities, Blair McFarland says it will only work if every community and even towns like Alice Springs switch to the new fuel.


BLAIR MCFARLAND: The more regionally it's used the more effective it is, because if you have one community that uses Opal but there's another community 20 kilometres away that's using normal petrol, well, you know, there's still going to be normal petrol around. People go backwards and forwards and fill up here, fill up there, and it reduces the effectiveness of Opal if there are communities nearby.


ANNE BARKER: Why should the Federal Government, though, subsidise the cost of this fuel to so many communities if there are only a small number of people that are affected after all?


BLAIR MCFARLAND: Partly because that small number of people is sort of like a large number of people when you think about the communities that they're from.


But just the straight out numerical analysis of the cost of looking after a whole bunch of petrol sniffers indefinitely who've got acquired brain injury versus the cost of a subsidy that reduces the chances of those people getting that brain injury, it makes good economic sense.


ANNE BARKER: How much should the Federal Government be putting up then?


BLAIR MCFARLAND: Well, we think eight million dollars a year would eliminate, pretty much, eliminate petrol sniffing from Central Australia.


ANNE BARKER: The Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott says the Commonwealth is prepared to consider expanding the subsidy, but only within limits.


TONY ABBOTT: It's not just a question of adjacent Aboriginal communities but if the Aboriginal community is not that far from a standard roadhouse or petrol station, the issue arises, well, why not have this special fuel there. Why not ultimately put this special fuel in right across the board?


Well, you've got to draw the line somewhere, and obviously if it is a real problem in a particular community the first priority is to get unsniffable petrol in that community.


ELEANOR HALL: Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott, talking to Anne Barker in Darwin.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 18th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Reporter: Anne Barker
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Govt considers extending non-sniff fuel program

Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott says the Government will consider a proposal to introduce the new Opal fuel, a low aromatic petrol developed by BP, right across central Australia.


The Federal Government is subsiding 35 remote Indigenous communities to use the fuel, which cannot be used by petrol sniffers to get high.


But the Tangentyere Council in Alice Springs says that will not solve the problem of black market petrol, and says the fuel should be rolled out to all areas from Port Augusta to Katherine, and across to Laverton in Western Australia.


Mr Abbott says Opal will first be used in communities to replace AVGAS, and the Government will then consider extending the program.


"The first priority is to get unsniffable petrol in that community, and then let's think about where else it might need to try to ensure there is no recidivism," he said.


The Northern Territory Government has also requested an extension of the program, saying urban centres like Alice Springs need access to the new fuel.


The Community Services Minister, Marion Scrymgour, says a lot of people in remote communities travel to urban centres where they should be able to buy the fuel.


"If that availability isn't in Alice Springs or Tennant and some of the places where we've got these hot spots of sniffing, it won't be able to make the strategies as effective as what we'd like to see it done," she said.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 18th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Council urges wider distribution of 'unsniffable' petrol

An Aboriginal council in Alice Springs says a new fuel that cannot be used by petrol sniffers to get high should be introduced right across central Australia.


The Federal Government is launching the fuel in remote Aboriginal communities today.


"[It is] a special type of unleaded fuel without any aromatic hydrocarbons specially designed for use in remote Indigenous communities," Health Minister Tony Abbott told Parliament.


"I'm pleased to say that thanks to this, the Government will continue to spend $1 million a year supplying unsniffable fuel to remote communities where petrol sniffing is a potential problem."


Blair McFarland who works with petrol sniffers for the Tangentyere Council in Alice Springs says the fuel should be rolled out across central Australia from Port Augusta to Katherine and across the border to Laverton in Western Australia.


He says subsidising the rollout may cost the Government less than it spends on caring for chronic petrol sniffers.


"We've done an estimate - based on the amount of fuel sold in the region of $8 million a year - which is the equivalent of looking after 30 brain damaged petrol sniffers," he said.


Mr McFarland says the rollout would also cripple the black market in petrol in central Australia.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 18th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Toads turning dogs into junkies

Dogs are licking the backs of cane toads to get high from a poison secreted from their glands, a Territory vet has revealed.


And the dogs are becoming addicted to the hallucinogenic cane toad poison -- bufo toxin.


Katherine vet Megan Pickering said yesterday she had seen many cases of dogs affected by the deadly toad poison.


"We have had quite a number of cases of dogs that are getting addicted to the toxin," she said.


"There seems to be dogs that are licking the toxin to get high.


"They lick the toads and only take in a small amount of the poison -- they get a smile on their face and look like they are going to wander off into the sunset."


Cane toads have been in Katherine for three wet seasons.


And dogs, being dogs, have discovered that just a little lick of bufo toxin makes a dog's life shine brighter.


Ms Pickering has treated more than 30 dogs suffering from the deadly effects of bufo toxin at her Katherine Vet Care surgery.


She said there was no doubt after experiencing the effects of cane toad bufo toxin there were some bleary-eyed dogs "going back to have a second go".


"It seems some of them have tasted it in small doses but there are others that have had more toxin and come in fully-fitting.


"But (despite this) they go on to do it again and again -- they seem to have worked it out."


Ms Pickering said the dogs were not developing a tolerance to the toxin but only ingesting small amounts.


"Larger doses would be fatal," she said.


NT Parks and Wildlife get more inquiries about safeguarding pets from the toad than on any other aspect.


They say the answer is to keep dogs and cats inside at night, warn and train them against tackling toads, and best of all keep toads out of your yard.


Ms Pickering said if a dog was suffering from cane toad poisoning -- fitting, running in circles, with bright red gums and/or frothing at the mouth -- wash its mouth out with water as quickly as possible.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 18th February 2005
Author: Suellen Hinde
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Thursday, February 17, 2005

'Disturbed' man banned from sex workers murder trial

A member of the public who approached a jury member has been banned from attending the trial of two Darwin teenagers charged with the murder of a pair of sex workers.


The Northern Territory Supreme Court heard that yesterday afternoon the man approached a member of the jury and asked questions about the trial.


After trying to enter the courtroom again today he was detained by security officers.


Justice Dean Mildren told the court that the person was probably a little disturbed and did not realise the extent of what he was doing.


He said it had nothing to do with the accused teenagers, Ben William McLean and Phu Ngoc Trinh.


The man has been banned from the court precinct for the duration of the trial and jury members will be escorted to their cars each afternoon.


The trial will continue as normal.


In testimony heard today, the defence counsel asked a police officer if he knew one of the deceased women had been approached by a Vietnamese drug dealer before her death, but had refused to cooperate with him.


The officer told the court he was unaware of the information.


He was also questioned about a woman who reported seeing two Asian men near the Adelaide River Bridge two days before the women's bodies were found.


No further action was taken in relation to the men.


McLean and Trinh are both charged with two counts of murder after the women's bodies were found floating in the Adelaide River, south-east of Darwin, almost a year ago.


They have pleaded not guilty to the charges.


The trial continues.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 17th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Govt to supply new 'unsniffable' fuel

A petrol company has developed a special type of fuel that cannot be used by petrol sniffers to get high.


The Federal Health Minister says that since 1998 the Government has ensured aviation fuel has been substituted for normal fuel in some Indigenous communities.


Aviation fuel does not contain aromatic hydrocarbons, which are attractive to sniffers.


Tony Abbott says that is no longer possible because aviation fuel must now contain the hydrocarbons for environmental reasons.


However, the Minister has told Parliament that a new type of fuel has been developed and the Government will pay to supply it to Indigenous communities.


"[It is] a special type of unleaded fuel without any aromatic hydrocarbons specially designed for use in remote Indigenous communities," Mr Abbott said.


"I'm pleased to say that thanks to this, the Government will continue to spend $1 million a year supplying unsniffable fuel to remote communities where petrol sniffing is a potential problem."


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 17th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Added spices in Pizza Box

A 33-year-old woman has been arrested and charged by Alyangula police for attempting to bring cannabis and alcohol into a Groote Eylandt dry community.


Police received information that a woman was carrying bottles of spirits and a stash of cannabis aboard a flight from Darwin to Groote Eylandt.


When the aircraft landed at Groote Eylandt, police intercepted two female passengers after they disembarked.


Both women were escorted to the luggage area where their luggage was searched, and police found a pizza box secreting 182 individual deal bags of cannabis each containing about one gram.


The woman was bailed to appear in the Alyangula Court of Summary Jurisdiction on 15 February.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 17th February 2005
Source: Territory Times
Email: territorytimes@iprimus.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Territory Times

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Bikes' roar falls silent in court

Ten people identified with the Hell's Angels Motorcycle Club, some wearing club "colours", fronted Darwin Magistrates Court yesterday on federal charges.


They faced a varying number of charges of refusing to answer a question at an Australian Crime Commission (ACC) examination.


They faced a varying number of charges of refusing to answer a question at an Australian Crime Commission (ACC) examination.


The 10 were required to appear yesterday for a "mention" of their charges, which Magistrate Peter Dixon adjourned to March 14 for a further mention.


The magistrate prohibited publication of their names under the Territory Evidence Act.


The Australian Crimes Commission Act gives the commission wide powers. Identification of witnesses before the ACC is an offence.


Mr Dixon noted that all defendants had been arrested and granted bail ranging from $1000 to $5000.


He continued their bail, excusing some from attending court for the next mention.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 16 February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News (Australia)
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News
Contact: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Website: http://ntnews.news.com.au/

New Bill enhances policing of drug trade

We all like to think we are appreciated for the job we do each and every day of our working life, and a pat on the head by the boss goes a long way to making us feel good.


I’m sure members of our hardworking police force are no exception to this feeling and last week, Police, Fire and Emergency Services Minister Paul Henderson showed his appreciation for a job well done.


In Parliament last Thursday Mr Henderson highlighted the great results being achieved by the NT police in attacking drug-related crime.


Since the Parliament gave our police some extra powers back in 2002 with the amended Misuse of Drugs Act, the cop on the beat now has the power to declare drug premises and shut them down.


Just how effective our police have been is backed up by some outstanding figures.


Since the commencement of the legislation, NT police have issued 208 drug house notices leading to 78 arrests, 25 summonses and 52 summary infringement notices for possession, cultivation, manufacture or supply of drugs at drug houses.


Further good news was the fact police have seized drugs worth an estimated $953,000, including 18.23kg of cannabis, 668.5g of amphetamines, 67 cannabis plants, and 48 tabs of LSD.


Strangely, of the 208 drug house notices issued, only two premises have been declared “drug houses.”


The police who know say that’s because in the remaining 206 cases the dealers have been harassed out of business and forced out of the premises.


This doesn’t mean they have stopped dealing, but from the dealers’ point of view they are just one step ahead of the cops.
But with pressure being continually applied by the police, the dealers will take the normal reaction and generally move to a state where it is easier to sell drugs.


In addition to the ongoing work in targeting drug houses, NT police have attacked the sources of supply.


In the past financial year they successfully dismantled 13 clandestine drug laboratories.


Then to further strengthen our police, last week saw the introduction in parliament a Bill (sic) called the Police Administration Bill 2004. This Bill, like most other Bills, slipped through parliament with nobody giving it much thought.


But this Bill will mean a lot to the cop on the beat.


In the past, while police had been able to detain suspects temporarily during illicit-drug-related (sic) searches, they could not detain people when illicit drugs weren’t directly involved.


This amendment gives police the ability to restrain suspected criminals from tipping off their mates during search warrants, and reduces the risk of evidence being removed from the scene unlawfully.


Continued pressure by all members of the police, from Commissioner Paul White down to the probationary constable, is working to eliminate the many problems associated with drugs and their dealers from our society.


Nobody in their right mind would say the drug problem is completely under control, but things are certainly getting a lot better than they were a few years ago.


It’s a shame you can still find drugs available at quite a few pubs and clubs on a Saturday night.


There are those in the community who would like to see cannabis legalised and they certainly have a strong case to present. But as long as it is still illegal then the police must enforce the law as it stands.


We have seen normal cigarette smokers being treated as social outcasts and forced to congregate in small huddles in dark corners.


But the Government has not gone the extra step in banning the smoking of tobacco – and I bet it’s because of the huge revenue it receives from the tax on every packet.


Now that our NT police force has managed to feel like they are appreciated for a job well done, all we need now to give them complete job satisfaction is to ensure tougher punishments are handed out by the courts.


It must be heartbreaking to see some of the regular criminals of all ages who continue to break the law, get caught by the cop on the beat, only to have no fear of receiving a stiff punishment.


How often do we see cases of teenage criminals in particular who are repeat offenders get off with either suspended sentences or good behaviour bonds?


I’m sure all members of our judiciary are aware of the public reaction to some of the punishments handed down, but they, like our police, have a strict set of rules by which they must abide.


If the rules are out of touch with society, then – like the amendment to the police Act – let’s change a few of them.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 16th February 2005
Author: Col Newman
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Dopey litter

During Parliamentary debate over drug busts, CLP MLA for Katherine Fay Miller offered an interesting anecdote. Ms Miller, the owner of Red Gum Tourist Park, said: “Twice I have had …packets of marijuana dropped on the floor. It must be so freely available around the place that they were quite easy to drop it on the floor and did not even miss it.” Ms Miller said the two packets were burned in the incinerator. “I have not ever attempted to try the stuff myself,” she said.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 16th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Jail work camps call

Independent member for Nelson Gerry Wood last night called for prison work camps to be trialled in the Territory.


He said he would move a motion in the Parliament today calling for the camps, which could be based on trials being held in Western Australia.


A trial camp could be established in the Katherine or Barkly regions, Mr Wood said.


He said the camps would let prisoners do community work and enhance their self-esteem.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 16th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Url: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Crime compo rejected as strain on Budget

Territory victims of crime should be compensated for property damage caused by drunks and criminals, it has been claimed.


But the Territory Government last night dismissed the call as an "unbearable strain on the budget".


CLP Member for Katherine Fay Miller made the call in Parliament following three incidents of unprovoked vandalism in the town in recent weeks.


DAVID and Shannon Van de Weyer were attacked in the main street by a gang of drunks - as revealed by the Northern Territory News.


The drunks used a sledgehammmer to smash their car.


TERRY Dickens, a 64-year-old crippled pensioner, was mugged by a group of five youths last month.


In a daylight attack, they surrounded his motorised wheelchair and stole his wallet.


The incident was also reported by the Northern Territory News.


DARREN Crotty's car was damaged last month when he was forced to stop in front of a drunken street brawl.


Three members of the group ran towards his car, with one jumping on the bonnet and smashing a car window.


Ms Miller told Parliament: "[These incidents] are of great concern to the community and reflect very badly on what is happening.


"How can these drug-related incidents, and alcohol-related incidents, happen to families who have no recourse to get repayment or compensation for the damage which has been caused to their property?


"I want to ask the minister if the Government could look at areas of addressing compensation for these people."


But Richard O'Leary, a spokesperson for Attorney-General Peter Toyne, said last night compensation for victims was only given for personal injury.


He said the courts could judge compensation claims for property damage.


"I fully empathasise with the families involved," he said.


"But if Fay Miller is proposing the Crimes (Victims Assistance) Act be expanded to include property damage, she has just committed the CLP to massive tax rises to pay for what would be an unbearable drain on the budget."


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 15th February 2005
Author: Paul Dyer
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au

Lawyers angry after clients driven 1,000kms in police cage

ELEANOR HALL: To the Northern Territory now where lawyers for four young Aboriginal prisoners have condemned a police decision to transport the youths more than 1,000 kilometres in the steel cage of a police van.


The juveniles were arrested at Borroloola, in the Gulf of Carpentaria, and taken to Darwin to appear in court on various breaking and entering charges.


The lawyers say the youths were transported at high speed without seatbelts. But police say all proper procedures were followed.


In Darwin, Anne Barker reports.


ANNE BARKER: Borroloola is about 1,000 kilometres from Darwin by road, across some of Australia's most remote terrain


After a spate of burglaries in recent weeks, four youths, aged 15 and 16, were arrested there last weekend and taken to Darwin to appear in court


But instead of using a police aircraft to transport them, as is often the case, they travelled the distance in the steel cage of a police van


Lawyers at the North Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service, or NAALAS, claim it's one of the most dangerous highways in Australia, with most of the road a single-lane strip of bitumen heavily used by long road trains.


And Steve Miller, a field officer at NAALAS, says it's outrageous that anyone - black, white or brindle - should be forced to travel such a long distance without a seatbelt or even adequate rest stops.


STEVE MILLER: Carting people in the back of police car is old school now, you know. I mean, it shouldn't be happening at all. I'd really like to see it on the opposite foot, you know, having the police in the back for 1,000 kilometres and no toilet stops until you know, 800kms later. It's a bit how you going. It's a bit rough.


ANNE BARKER: What sort of conditions were there in the back of that cage?


STEVE MILLER: Oh, basically, they told me that they had cushions there which you know, didn't really protect their rear ends from the hard flooring of the cages. There's no seatbelts in the back of those cages. All the kids said that they were travelling well over 100 kilometres plus, you know.


I mean, without seatbelts, that's a bit how you going, it's a bit ordinary basically. I mean, there's planes there, available. One child wasn't given bail. He had no criminal history as what I could gather as yet. He hasn't been convicted.


ANNE BARKER: NAALAS has lodged formal complaints with both the police commissioner in Darwin and the Northern Territory ombudsman, demanding better treatment and safety for remote Indigenous prisoners.


But police say all proper procedures were followed, including the number of rest stops, that a police aircraft wasn't available, and that's it's quite common for prisoners to travel long distances by road.


When The World Today asked a police spokesman if there'd been any thought to putting seatbelts in steel cages, the answer was "you've got to be kidding" and he denied police drove anywhere near 100 kilometres an hour.


But NAALAS President Natalie Hunter says transporting juveniles over long distances creates broader social problems, and young suspects should be dealt with in their home communities.


NATALIE HUNTER: We have bush courts that happen out in the community and not only that, we also have video link up and telephone link up, with the Magistrate Court. So to bring clients in, thousands of miles in to deal with it and just no way of getting home, no transportation, we're just creating itinerants here, in the Darwin community.


ELEANOR HALL: Natalie Hunter is President of the Northern Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service in Darwin and she was speaking to our North Australia Correspondent, Anne Barker.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 15th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation (The World Today)
Reporter: Anne Barker
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Contact: comments@your.abc.net.au
Website: http://www.abc.net.au/

Martin Luther King in court

A 16-year-old boy called Martin Luther King has appeared in Darwin Magistrate's Court charged with 23 counts of stealing, damaging property and possessing drugs.


The juvenile, who is from Borroloola, appeared with four alleged co-offenders.


He was represented by North Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service (NAALAS) lawyer Michael Powell.


"I suppose I should ask my client if he had a dream your worship," Mr Powell said to magistrate Vince Luppino.


Luther King was remanded in custody at Don Dale and will appear in court again today.


Barkly Division Superintendent Colin Smith said 10 juveniles had been charged with a total of 143 offences relating to several unlawful entries at Borroloola in recent months.


The juveniles are aged between 13 and 16.


"We believe these juveniles were responsible for up to 80 per cent of unlawful entries in Borroloola since November," Supt Smith said.


"Two CIB detectives were sent up from Tennant Creek to address the escalating property crime rate and with the help of local police and information provided by the community we had a quick result.


"The final straw of the escalating cycle was when the safe was stolen from the school last week."


Other properties targeted by the juveniles in recent months included a childcare centre, a bulk discounts store and several homes.


In the latest theft, last Friday, thieves stole a pair of shorts, a wallet, a mobile phone and cigarettes from a home while the occupant was asleep.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 15th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Rebecca Hewett and Greg McLean
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Url: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Cops take arrested teens on 1000km trip

Four youths were driven more than 1000km over remote roads in the back of a police paddy wagon, it was revealed last night.


The four, aged 15 and 16, were being taken from Borooloola to Darwin to face court over stealing charges.


The president of the North Australian Legal Aid Service (NAALAS) has lodged a complaint with the Police Commissioner and the Ombudsman over the decision. "The decision by police to transport four young people in cages over such a great distance in such dangerous conditions is deplorable," NAALAS president Natalie Hunter said.


But southern region police Commander Mark Coffey defended the decision to drive the boys to Darwin, saying, "all proper procedures were followed".


"The police air wing aircraft was being used in operational duties so the prisoners were transferred by road with appropriate rest periods,"


Cdr. Coffey said. The boys, who have been charged with theft, damaging property and entering a building with intent, were refused bail at Borroloola.


On Saturday morning they were driven 700km to Katherine and held for several hours in police cells while the police team changed over.


The four boys were then driven to Adelaide River, where the police escort changed again.


They completed their journey to Darwin's Don Dale Juvenile Detention Centre about 10 o'clock that night.


Ms Hunter said the 15-year-old and three 16-year-olds would have been unable to alert police quickly if a fight had broken out or if some one had been taken ill.


NAALAS said the boys told their lawyers they were "scared" and uncomfortable in the back of the van.


"They said that the vehicles were driven at high speed… they could not get out for the toilet when they needed to and they were supplied with inadequate food and blankets," a NAALAS statement said.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 15th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Rebecca Hewett
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Url: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Thursday, February 10, 2005

Druggie goes down over slippery ice

A man found to be an aspiring drug dealer was yesterday jailed for 28 days.


Robert Ewin Chin, 39, reduced amphetamine paste to "ice", which is a purer form of the drug.


Justice Dean Mildren told the Supreme Court: "I do not think he intended to be a large supplier... I am unable to say on what level he was involved or intended to be involved in supply."


The judge said he was not impressed with Chin's evidence and found him "slippery".


Justice Mildren said he found it difficult to believe Chin bought the drug with $7000 he had saved and which was in a tin at his father's house. He also found it difficult to believe Chin did not know he was bankrupt until last month.


"His behaviour with creditors and his failure to pay taxes shows he is not an honest person," Justice Mildren said.


Chin pleaded guilty to possessing a commercial quantity of methamphetamine (107.862g) and possessing two ecstasy tablets on February 6 last year.


Justice Mildren sentenced him to 12 months' jail for the amphetamine and three months for the ecstasy, a total of 15 months.


He suspended the sentence after the mandatory 28 days, less three days for time in custody.


The sentence was suspended on condition that Chin commit no jailable offence for 18 months.


The judge said he accepted that at the time Chin had a drug habit and was going through a marriage breakup.


He gave Chin credit for completing a 15-week rehabilitation program and for an early guilty plea.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 10th February 2005
Author: Bob Watt
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Tip-off law passed

Police will now be able to restrict suspected criminals tipping off associates during search warrants.


This follows the Police Administration Amendment Act 2004 being passed by the NT Parliament.


Police Minister Paul Henderson said: "The new amendments will give police these powers, reducing the risks of suspects tipping off associates and the risk of evidence being removed from the scene unlawfully."


Other changes delivered by the Bill include:


LETTING the Police Commissioner alter the period of probation, particularly relevant as already experienced officers beginning NT police careers;


EXTENDING the Commissioner's power of delegation; and


MINOR amendments to remove redundant clauses.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 10th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Wednesday, February 09, 2005

Father of 10 jailed over drug offences

A Darwin father of 10 has been sentenced in the Northern Territory Supreme Court to 15 months jail for possessing a commercial quantity of methamphetamine and a traffickable quantity of ecstasy.


Fisherman Robert Ewan Chin, 39, pleaded guilty to the charges.


The court heard that police searched Chin's Howard Springs residence almost a year ago.


In a cupboard in the living room they found clip-seal bags with two ecstasy tablets and a brown substance, glass jars with a white crystalline substance, needles and syringes.


The total value of the drugs was estimated to be between $8,500 and $10,500.


Justice Dean Mildren said Chin initially bought the drugs in a pub from men he refused to identify.


Justice Mildren said Chin never sold the drugs but swapped and shared them with others.


Chin was sentenced to 15 months jail suspended after 28 days.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 9th February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Drug testing green light for ADF

Government MPs have approved changes to the laws covering testing for illicit drug use in the Australian Defence Force after a defence magistrate criticised the processes being used.


Late last year Defence Minister Robert Hill confirmed that the magistrate had dismissed a charge against an army officer, saying a urine sample was taken in a manner inconsistent with the Defence Act. The officer was not identified.


The ruling cast doubt over the ADF's zero-tolerance drugs strategy and its ability to prosecute suspected drug users.


The Opposition said senior officers trying to stamp out drug taking in the ADF had been left in the lurch by the Government's failure to introduce regulations to make random drug tests legal as promised in September 2002.


It suggested that prosecutions against 47 defence personnel who tested positive to drugs at Robertson Barracks in Darwin, last year, had been overturned for the same reason and the ADF might be liable to unfair dismissal claims or compensation from 33 personnel subsequently thrown out of the force.


Senator Hill said the Defence Department had opted to use its command structure to introduce drug testing and he was seeking advice on the ruling.


In response to that advice, amendments were drafted to Defence legislation and approved yesterday at a meeting of the Coalition partyroom.


A Government spokesman said last night that the legislation would not be retrospective.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 9th February 2005
Source: The Age
Author: Brendan Nicholson, National Security Correspondent
Website: http://www.theage.com.au/
Email: letters@theage.com.au
Copyright: 2005 The Age

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Pain service to be expanded

The Northern Territory's chronic pain service will be expanded to help sufferers.


The service will be upgraded this year and nearly $300,000 will be allocated each year to continue its life changing programs.


The new service will include a multi-disciplinary assessment and care planning team to provide group treatment in Darwin and Alice Springs.


"This will mean increased access to visiting medical pain specialists and support, and advice to doctors managing people with chronic pain," Health Minister Peter Toyne said.


"The improved service will also forge links to an interstate centre of excellence and will include funding to enable client assessments in locations where the multi-disciplinary team is not available. This will ensure Territorians who suffer chronic can get the best treatment possible when the new service begins in July this year."


The upgrade coincides with changes to legislation controllling the use of Schedule 8 drugs that came into effect yesterday.


"The prescriptions of these medicines will be more tightly controlled and monitored," Dr Toyne said.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 8th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Doctor's son jailed

The son of a leading Territory surgeon has been jailed for eight months in Indonesia on drugs charges.


Richard Jonathon Wardill, 27, of Darwin, had faced up to six years behind bars.


He was convicted yesterday of buying four ecstasy tablets on Batam, an island off the southeast coast of Sulawesi.


Wardill was arrested after buying the tablets from two women in the street.


His father, Jon Wardill, is a prominent surgeon at Royal Darwin Hospital.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 8th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Saturday, February 05, 2005

Bail granted for partners over $40,000 ecstasy haul

Leading NT doctor Gerry Goodhand has put up a $5000 surety to bail his son on drug charges.


Karel Goodhand, 26, told Darwin Magistrate's Court he wanted to travel to Sydney to brief his barrister, but police objected to varying the bail.


They said they had information the ecstasy involved in the case against Goodhand and his 24-year-old partner, Melinda Frances Bartlett, had come from Sydney.


They feared he was going to Sydney to deal with drug suppliers rather than to see his counsel.


Magistrate Peter Dixon granted Goodhand the variation allowing him to go to Sydney on strict conditions and after his father put up the surety.


The magistrate reduced reporting to police for the pair from three times a week to once a week after Dr Goodhand also put up a $5000 surety for Bartlett. She did not ask to travel with her partner.


Goodhand and Bartlett each face a charge of possessing a commercial quantity of ecstasy.


Prosecutor Sergeant Karen Sanderson said the charge involved 174g of MDMA, with an estimated street value of $40,000.


Goodhand had no record for drug matters and had already surrendered his passport.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 5th February 2005
Author: Bob Watt
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

DNA the key

An unsolved robbery at a Darwin pharmacy four years ago has allegedly been unravelled after DNA analysis.


Police have now interviewed a 32-year-old man over the crime.


Two men wearing face masks burst into the Trower Rd chemist in Casuarina on Boxing Day, 2000.


One of them brandished a syringe filled with a red liquid and they demanded drugs.


The 32-year-old man has been summonsed for attempted stealing with violence.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 5th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

'Ice' man made drug

A man paid $7000 for amphetamines, then reducing it to a more pure form called "ice", was addicted to the drug, the NT Supreme Court heard yesterday.


Robert Ewin Chin had the income to buy the drug and he was not selling it, his counsel Ian Rowbottam said.


He had admitted to making the drug more pure to feed his addiction.


Yesterday was the third day in court for Chin, 39, who pleaded guilty last October to possessing methamphetamine (107.862g) on February 6, 2004.


Justice Dean Mildren said he would sentence Chin on Wednesday.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 5th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Friday, February 04, 2005

Thieves back for drugs

Thieves broke into the same house twice within five days and stole a cancer sufferer's medication, police revealed last night.


In the first theft, the trio climbed through a cat flap and fled with a small amount of cash. They returned to the house on Wednesday and broke in through an unlocked bedroom window between 7.30am and 10.30am.


As well as the cancer medication, the thieves made off with clothing, cash and two Aboriginal dot paintings valued at $1200.


It is believed the cancer medication was for pain relief and to thin the woman's blood.


Police arrested three people after noticing one of them trying to sell a stolen painting at shops at Alice Springs city centre only hours after the theft was reported.


Police later interviewed and charged two men, aged 32 and 19, and a 29-year-old woman.


The woman was found with some of the cancer medication as well as the victim's personal items.


All three were also questioned and charged over a break-in at Annie's backpackers' hostel on Tuesday night.


Alcohol and a can of spray paint were stolen from the hostel. The paint was used to deface a tour bus.


Detective Senior Constable Leith Phillips of Alice Springs police advised people to lock their doors and windows.


The offenders were bailed to appear in court.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 4th February 2005
Author: Greg McLean
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Bail after 4 assaulted

A man assaulted three police officers and a security guard after taking amphetamines topped up with alcohol, Darwin Magistrate's Court heard.


Malcolm Campbell Mauchline, 30, spat blood and saliva at the police and threatened the security officer with a sculptors knife.


Mauchline pleaded guilty.


Defence lawyer Alex Hill said Mauchline, of Fannie Bay, had a diagnosed mental problem.


Magistrate Greg Cavanagh said he was "bemmused" that the NT Legal Aid Commission with its mental-state defence could not afford to get a psychiatric report.


He ordered the report and a presentence report and adjourned sentencing until March 14.


Mauchline was given bail.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 4th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Watch the clock

People give all sorts of excuses for turningn up late to Darwin Magistrate's Court. On Wednesday we heard a new one - the defendant in a cannabis case said his watch was on West Australian time (1 and a half hours behind the NT). "Just as well my watch isn't," said Magistrate Peter Dixon, on exchange from Tasmania, whhere the time is 1 and a half hours ahead of the Territory's.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 4th February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Thursday, February 03, 2005

Criminalise petrol sniffing, says community worker

A juvenile diversion officer at the Aboriginal community of Docker River in the Northern Territory's far south-west says until petrol sniffing is made illegal the problem will continue.


The Northern Territory Government introduced legislation to Parliament last year banning sniffing but not criminalising it.


That means sniffers will be open to a compulsory treatment order but not prosecution.


Docker River juvenile diversion officer Mark Swindells says traffickers of petrol must be open to prosecution.


"It's a huge problem and until it becomes illegal, until dealers who make huge amounts of money selling a bottle of petrol for $50 to $100 dollars are arrested and taken out of society, then the problem continues," he said.


A spokeswoman for Family and Community Services Minister Marion Scrymgour says anyone who supplies a volatile substance for the purposes of sniffing can already be prosecuted in the Northern Territory's courts.


The spokeswoman says that under the Government's new legislation penalties for such offences will be toughened.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 3rd February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Drugs seized in police raids

Northern Territory police have seized cannabis plants in three operations in Darwin's rural area.


A 44-year-old man and 46-year-old woman have been summonsed for possessing and cultivating a trafficable quantity of cannabis following a police search of their premises at Rum Jungle.


In the same area, a 38-year-old man was issued with a drug infringement notice for possessing cannabis.


A notice was also issued to a 32-year-old man after a police search at a Humpty Doo residence found six grams of cannabis.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 3rd February 2005
Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Website: http://www.abc.net.au
Email: comments@your.abc.net.au
Copyright: 2005 Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

Heroin bust

A Moulden couple were busted with cocaine and heroin during a police raid.


Officers from the Drug Enforcement Section found 7.3g of heroin and 9.8g of cocaine during the search, as well as 4g of cannabis.


A 26-year-old man who lived at the premises was arrested over the stash.


Senior Sergeant Les Martin of the Drug Enforcement Section said it was unusual to find heroin in Darwin.


"At this stage we are not treating the find as an emerging trend although we will be monitoring the situation," he said.


The man was charged with supplying heroin, possessing and using heroin, cocaine and cannabis and was bailed to appear before a court at a later date.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 01st February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Correct in procedure

In response to the article "Baby searched for drugs" (Northern Territory News, January 25), the complaint by Ms Castine was investigated.


Police searched the home because information indicated that drugs could be found on the premises and a drug search was authorised by a superintendent and a justice of the peace.


One of the two infants present was wearing a nappy.


The mother of the baby was approached by a female police officer to inform her that police would search the nappy.


Experience has found the conealment of drugs in this method has been used by other people.


But before police could make arrangements to search the nappy, the mother remocved the nappy from the child herself and showed police.


This was witnessed by two police officers and at no time was the nappy searched while the baby was still wearing it.


Police are confident that all appropriate procedures regarding the search were followed.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 01st February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Commander K. Vanderlaan - NT Police (letter to editor)
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News

Gross injustice

When Schapelle Corby left Brisbane Airport on October 8 last year with her brother and two female friends, she was looking forward to celebrating her sister Mercedes's 30th birthday.


It's been well-documented what happened when she arrived in Bali.


Was the bag containing her boogie board screened?


If not, why not?


In this day, with terrorism on everyone's minds while flying, I would have thought it was of the upmost importance that screening be done on every article of luggage.


If it was screened, why have they chosen not to disclose their findings to the Corby family.


There is something very odd going on.


Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org
Pubdate: 1st February 2005
Source: Northern Territory News
Author: Shun Hatton (letter to the editor)
Website: http://www.ntnews.com.au
Email: ntnmail@ntn.newsltd.com.au
Copyright: 2005 Northern Territory News