Pubdate: Sat, 24 Aug 2002 Source: East Anglian Daily Times (UK) Copyright: 2002 Eastern Counties Newspapers Group Ltd Contact: http://www.eadt.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/913 Author: Annie Davidson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) UNDERCOVER STING SNARED EX-LAWYER LAWYER And Hockey Star Turned Drugs Smuggler Jimmy Neale Was Caught In A Classic Customs Sting. IT was a trap - and Jimmy Neale walked right into it. As he unloaded his illegal cargo of ecstasy tablets he was unaware police and customs officials were already surrounding him. Neale had smuggled the 271,000 tablets - the largest seizure of the drug in its pure form in Australian history - into the country in a shipment of wine. Of the 940 cases imported, 20 contained ecstasy tablets. Customs officers used sophisticated analysis methods to target a sea container sailing from France to Australia. Before the £5 million haul had even arrived, the net was closing in around Neale. Once the shipment arrived, Australian Federal Police discovered stashed into 20 cases of the wine were 105.5kg of tablets of 50% pure ecstasy from the Netherlands, worth an estimated $14.8 million Australian dollars on the streets of Sydney. Customs detected the drug using x-ray and particle analysis after it arrived at a Sydney container terminal, shipped from Marseilles, France. Before it was officially unloaded, the police replaced the tablets with dummies, and mounted an 11-day surveillance operation which cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Officers finally swooped on December 8, 2000, as Neale delivered the 'fake' drugs to Australian bartender Bruce Ridgway. In July 2000, Neale and Ridgway had flown from Hong Kong to France to personally organise the consignment, visiting St-Emilion, a pretty French village on the northern slopes of the Dordogne valley outside Bordeaux. After discovering the drugs, federal agents learned that Neale, 56, and his fiancee Claire Graham, 33, had checked into Sydney's Marriott Hotel on November 21, as representatives of JLC Fine Wines Ltd of Happy Valley, Hong Kong. On December 6, they switched to the plush Regent for two nights. Two days later, Neale had 90 cases of wine delivered to Millers Wine Storage in Sydney's suburb of Alexandria. But for someone who called himself a wine importer, Neale actually knew little about quality. Inhabitants of Saint-Emilion do know their grapes after more than 1,000 years of wine-making. Certainly, St-Emilion purveyors did not much rate the 'quaffers' Neale chose to mask what remains Australia's largest pure ecstasy haul. His selection of 940 cases of Grands Vins de Bordeaux, the vineyard experts told the Australian Federal Police, were more vin ordinaire than top export drops. In fact, federal agents would later learn that the wine imported to Sydney in late November 2000 was not even appropriately labelled for Australia. The cost of meeting local labelling standards would have made the cheap wine importation unviable. However Neale knew that the contents of the crates could make him more money than any wine importation. On December 8, Neale returned to Millers Wine Storage and collected two wooden crates containing dummy tablets. With his hotel room bugged and an audio tape secreted near a payphone at the Regent, Neale was overheard making arrangements with Ridgway and talking about the drugs during phonecalls to Hong Kong and Malaysia. After collecting the cases, he was heard on another call saying "everything is all right." That evening he met Ridgway in the Regent's bar. Australian Federal Police agents videotaped him in his room stooped over the bed removing the wine bottles from the crates and taking out the substituted ecstasy packets. He then replaced the wine bottles, using a towel to wipe down the packets and wine bottles he'd touched, returned the boxes to a cupboard and stuffed the tablets into a briefcase. The briefcase was later handed on to Ridgway, who was arrested by Australian Federal Police officers after leaving the Regent. Agents swooped on Neale and Ms Graham when they returned to their hotel room. Ms Graham denied all knowledge of the drugs and flew back to Hong Kong the next day. Judge Penny Hock said earlier this month she believed Ridgway, 54, was to have acted as distributor for the $1.08 million worth of the drugs he had been handed. He was sentenced to the maximum of 12 years in prison after admitting possessing a commercial quantity of ecstasy and being knowingly concerned in importing the amount. Neale claimed he was forced to import the drugs by criminal figures in Asia to whom he owed money. He pleaded not guilty but was convicted after a three-week trial at Sydney District Court in December 2001. He had moved to Hong Kong in the late 1990s. On his arrest in Sydney, Neale declined to assist authorities further. But an Australian Federal Police spokesman said the operation had led on to breakthroughs overseas. He said: "Working with others in Hong Kong, Singapore, London and The Hague, we have been able to target further operations. "It has helped identify patterns and organisations which have already yielded arrests and will continue to do so." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk