Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Pubdate: Mon 20 July, 1998 Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Greg Bearup $90M DRUGS HIDDEN IN OVENS Just after midday last Friday afternoon, outside a town house in South Wentworthville, a container truck stopped. It was packed with commercial kitchen equipment: devon slicers, sugar cane pressers, bone saws, ovens, mincers and meat slicers. It could have been the makings of the most valuable deli that Sydney had ever seen but Federal police and customs officers got to the ovens first, and removed, according to police sources, "enough smack to satisfy every junkie in Sydney for a couple of months". In what was the second largest heroin seizure in Australia's history, 146 700-gram and 350-gram blocks of high-grade heroin were found hidden in the three commercial ovens - enough heroin to break down into 3 million caps, police said. They put a street value of $90 million on the haul. Drug investigations co-ordinator Mr Steve Emes said the container had come from the south-eastern Chinese city of Xiamen and arrived at Port Botany on July 7. "Through intelligence we had received and information that the Australian Customs had gleaned independently we knew that there were some drugs on the container." The container was searched by customs officers and Federal police and a painstaking exercise was mounted to remove the 146 packages from the oven lining and replace them with a "substituted material". The container sat on the wharf at Botany until customs clearance and on Friday a container truck left the port at 10.50am. When it arrived at Wentworthville at 12.15 that afternoon a forklift was waiting to take the equipment into the town house garage. A 33-year-old Lidcombe man, the holder of a British passport issued in Hong Kong, was later arrested and charged with knowingly being concerned with the importation of heroin. He was remanded in custody on Saturday and will reappear in Central Local Court this morning. - --- Checked-by: "Rich O'Grady"