Pubdate: Wed, 08 Aug 2001 Source: Australian Associated Press (Australia Wire) Copyright: 2001 Australian Associated Press CRIME AUTHORITY BACKS HEROIN TRIAL Australia's top level crime fighting body, the National Crime Authority (NCA), has lent its support to a heroin trial with addicts being supplied out of a government repository. The NCA said options previously deemed unpalatable needed to be considered to help tackle the rising problem of drugs and organised crime. In a commentary on organised crime, the NCA said the reach of organised crime in Australia was pervasive, multi-faceted and with enormous social and economic costs. It said drugs remained the most lucrative commodity for organised crime and drug abuse cost the community an estimated $1.7 billion a year. The NCA backed unrelenting war on drug traffickers but said other measures also should be considered. "Suffice to say that experience should encourage us not to rule out consideration of options previously deemed unpalatable," it said. "We must respond to the ongoing progression of this problem. "Among the many measures worthy of consideration is to control the market for addicts by treating the supply of addictive drugs to them as a medical and treatment matter subject to supervision of a treating doctor and supplied from a repository that is government controlled." The NCA report comes on the same day that the Senate is to debate legislation substantially increasing NCA powers to compel reluctant witnesses to answer questions. But the NCA believes that even stronger measures may be needed to combat organised criminals who have proved adept at using new technology and foreign jurisdictions to exploit new criminal opportunities such as money laundering and people smuggling. It said organised crime was a significant threat that was growing in complexity and reach and a holistic approach needed to be taken. "Shortly yet emphatically stated, it should mirror the approach that government currently employs against established threats to national security," it said. In a forward to the report, NCA chairman John Broome said Justice Athol Moffit, whose royal commission into licensed clubs contributed to the formation of the NCA in 1984, published a book in 1985 titled A Quarter to Midnight. He said that alerted the community to the problem of organised crime. "Today there are no less greedy or unscrupulous people in our community," he said. "However, the opportunities available to them to profit from criminal activity have increased enormously. "A Quarter to Midnight on Justice Moffit's clock in 1985 has now become 23.55 on our computer or other digital screen." - --- MAP posted-by: