Pubdate: Tue, 02 May 2000 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2000 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: GPO Box 3771, Sydney NSW 2001 Fax: +61-(0)2-9282 3492 Website: http://www.smh.com.au/ Forum: http://forums.fairfax.com.au/ Author: Mark Riley, Herald Correspondent In New York US CRIME SYNDICATE THEORY IN DRUG HAUL Investigators suspect a major organised crime syndicate in California was behind the alleged shipment of $10 million of ecstasy intercepted in Italy last week, over which Australian Simon Main has been charged. The United States Drug Enforcement Authority and Customs Service are investigating 30-year-old Main's background and that of the other man arrested, Briton Alex Bruell, to see if they are linked to known crime figures. Investigators say Main made several trips in and out of the US this year. They will now try to trace his movements for clues to who else might have been involved in the alleged smuggling operation. Main (whose mother is a former partner of entertainer Barry Crocker) has been detained and charged over the seizure and is in a Trieste prison. He has told Italian police he was in the wrong place at the wrong time when drug squad officers arrested Bruell, a resident of California, in Italy last Monday. Bruell is charged with possession of $10 million worth of ecstasy, allegedly destined for Los Angeles. Italian authorities allege the seizure of 80 kilograms of ecstasy was connected to another of about 120,000 tablets smuggled into the US inside wooden furniture sent from Europe. Main has told Italian police he was a journalist working as a Los Angeles correspondent for a Sydney publication. A spokeswoman for the Australian Embassy in Washington said no journalist of that name was registered on its list of media correspondents. A US Customs spokesman, Mr Dean Boyd, said the amount of ecstasy being smuggled into the US from Europe had skyrocketed over the past year and that Los Angeles was considered the hub for distribution across the US. "We know there are some very powerful elements of the criminal community who are involved in ecstasy importation there," Mr Boyd said. "They are some of the biggest organised crime figures in the US and they are working with even more powerful criminal elements in Europe." About 4.3 million tablets have been seized by US Customs since October, compared with only 750,000 for all of 1998. Mr Boyd said organised crime figures were attracted to the trade by the huge profits from placing steep mark-ups on the drugs. One ecstasy tablet could be manufactured for as little as US20c (34c) in Europe, but could sell for between $US30 and $US40 on the streets, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk