Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jun 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: John Silvester WHEN THE UNDERWORLD MEETS HIGH SOCIETY It had been 30 years since the group of middle-aged businessmen were at private school together, and they wanted the reunion to be one to remember. Many - but not all - had realised their boyhood potential, making an impact in the fields of finance, medicine, engineering, education and the law. The reunion was a chance to catch up with old mates - to brag a little and drink a lot. One of the old boys, a man who had been successful in a cut-throat industry, had been looking forward to the night for weeks and he wanted to make sure his old school chums would be able to share in the spoils of his success. So he rang his private drug-dealer and placed a special order for "thumbs-up" - the best quality cocaine available. He bought 12 grams, worth $3600, to take to the Albert Park party. The next day he rang his dealer with a word of thanks. "The boys," he said, "had a ball." Now some of those men are waiting. They know there is a police investigation into cocaine use among Melbourne's elite. Now they fear a knock at the door from drug squad detectives. The reunion may truly be one to remember. IT WAS in mid-1999 that police received information about a loose group of high-level professionals who were allegedly using and trafficking cocaine. It was not the first time they had gathered intelligence on some of those named, but this time they found the evidence to back long-held suspicions. In September, detectives from Operation Regent, a joint Victoria Police-Australian Federal Police and Customs investigation seized 5.4 kilograms of cocaine. It was a huge amount, the largest quantity seized in Melbourne. But months later an operation in New South Wales showed the real size of the Australian problem. In February, Australian Federal Police and Customs officers seized nearly 500 kilograms of cocaine, valued at $140 million, from a yacht moored at the Hawkesbury River. Cocaine was now mainstream and the drug had made the strangest of bedfellows. Investigators from Operation Regent have gathered large amounts of material on cocaine use in Victoria and for the first time police have accurate intelligence to replace what was previously little more than informed speculation. They have now identified two hotels and three Melbourne nightclubs where cocaine use has been blatant. They have found the use of drugs in one of the hotels was surprisingly open and that a group of affluent city business people would slip out to the inner-suburban hotel to use during lunch and again after work. Detectives have been given a list of people who went to the hotel to use. It includes some connected to the legal profession, business people and two former police officers. Because the allegations against some suspects involve personal use that occurred more than 12 months ago, they will not be pursued. But while the offence of using a drug is considered minor, detectives may look at other forms of illegal behavior that appear to have been triggered by cocaine use. Police have found that many of those who used became obsessed with cocaine and would manipulate their work practices around their drug use. One respected professional billed a client for five separate "consultative meetings", which actually involved cocaine use at the hotel. Another would charge clients for work when he was using drugs and having sex with prostitutes in his office. Police know of at least one in the group who would provide criminals with professional advice and was prepared to accept drugs as full payment. Some could be pursued in relation to perjured court documents sworn out while under the influence of cocaine. AS PART of the investigation into the cocaine industry in Melbourne police have discovered a number of strange alliances. They have identified a group, nicknamed the "Bollinger Dealers" - young criminals who aspire to the champagne set. Police have identified some of the dealers mixing with groups of Australia's best-known celebrities at nightclubs and at the races, including at the young member's club at Oaks' Day. At one race meeting last year, several police were assaulted by a number of well-dressed men with questionable backgrounds who had been associating with celebrities that day. One of those well-dressed men was professional chef turned drug dealer, Mark Anthony Moran, who was shot dead outside his house on Thursday. On February 17, detectives from the Flemington CIU noticed Moran driving a luxury car. When they opened the boot of the car, rented from an agency at the airport, they found a high-tech handgun equipped with a silencer and a laser sight. They also found a large number of amphetamine pills that had been stamped in a specially designed pill-press to look like ecstasy tablets. Police have also become aware of an unexplained relationship between a star league footballer and a known cocaine dealer/user. There is nothing to suggest the player is involved in drugs but it is believed detectives have informally advised associates of the player that he should "choose his friends more wisely". Police say many of the Bollinger Dealers are the sons and daughters of a group of former Painters and Dockers members who were heavily involved in armed robberies and other crime in the 1970s. These dealers never sell drugs such as heroin and move only "party drugs" such as cocaine and ecstasy. Police say that some of the older-style criminals have long shed their unrefined ways. A group of some of Victoria's most notorious "retirement age" criminals, including Australia's best safe-breaker, now regularly meet on Saturday night for a Chinese meal and a chat. Their preferred restaurant is one of Melbourne's best - and most expensive. For the first time, police have developed an informer network that can provide information on who is using cocaine in the so-called elites of society. They can now identify where the drugs change hands from the traditional criminal networks to the high-income users. Detectives have seen a significant drop in the open use of cocaine in Melbourne in the past six months. They say the Hawkesbury River seizure has caused a scarcity, but they also believe two recent high-profile arrests in Melbourne have frightened some people who have dabbled in cocaine and now realise the risks of exposure. Some have made informal contact with police, trying to find out if their names have been mentioned in any phone tap or listening device material. "Some have been shocked and have grabbed at a second chance," one detective said. But others, he added, remain out of control. CALL them party drugs or give them cute names such as ecstasy, but ultimately the movement and production of illicit drugs is controlled by criminal groups who will use violence to protect their substantial interests. Late last year police went to Barwon prison to see a man charged with cocaine trafficking. They told him they had reliable information that he had been given a deliberate overdose of drugs while in jail to silence him. The inmate confirmed he had suffered an overdose but said he had self-administered the substance and did not believe it was a "hot-shot". Weeks later the inmate placed a drug squad number on his prison contact list. Again detectives went to visit him. This time he told them that he had made his own inquiries and he now believed there had been an attempt to kill him through tainted drugs. The inmate said he would now cooperate with police. He made a statement of more than a dozen pages implicating a well-known Melbourne figure as the financier in a cocaine importation. Police consider it a major breakthrough. The death of Moran should show local users of cocaine and ecstasy that while they like to think their drugs are harmless, the people who control the industry are prepared to kill on a whim. The modern drug dealer may wear a designer suit but he is still prepared to get his hands dirty - or bloodied - if the need arises. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck