Pubdate: 27 Oct 1998 Source: The Bulletin (Australia) Contact: BM Note: Interesting comment about American role in veto of Heroin trials ORGANISED CRIME: THE EVIL ECONOMY THE HEROIN CAME FROM THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE, hidden in a specific-purpose vessel - the Belize-registered freighter Uniana. The deal had been organised by Chinese Thad groups operating out of Hong Kong. They would get the drugs onto a beach on the NSW North Coast, where Australian-based Triad affiliates would take over, arranging distribution to yet other affiliated groups down the chain and around the nation. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Palmer is chuffed with the results of last week's operation - 400 kilograms of heroin seized, a sophisticated mothership impounded and 18 arrests effected, with more to come. Yet he is also a realist. "Australia is a ripe market," he says. "There is no question highly organised crime groups are here. They are here for the money. That shipment was meant for sale, not stockpile. They will try again." It begins in the home. First there is the missing change. The portable radio is lost. Then, the neverending demand for more money. What began as recreational drug use is now a full-blown habit and another young Australian has become a victim of - and link in - the organised crime chain. There is hardly an Australian family that has not directly, or through friends or relatives, watched a loved ore turn to crime to support a drug addiction. First they steal from family, then from friends, neighbours, and the wider community. Chemical dependency is the reason security guards now protect the suburban pharmacy and newsagent. It is the reason pensioners in the well-off suburbs fear break-ins and purse snatchings, why automatic teller machines everywhere have become targets. Drugs and the crime they spawn are no longer something that happens to someone else, somewhere else. Every city, suburb and country town is affected. The hopeless junkie rummaging through your bedroom is as likely to be the doctor's son from up the road as a desperado from the city's mean streets. According to figures from the University of NSW, drug-related property crime costs the community $1.6 billion a year, and rising. The number of armed robberies is also rising alarmingly - from banks to service stations to home invasions. Behind this crime wave is drugs, and behind the drugs is organised crime. In Australia it is a $9 billion-a-year industry, and it attracts all the major international players. In Queensland, the Japanese Yakuza invest in high-rise property. In Western Australia, crime figures connected to United States and Italian Mafia families land a multi-million-dollar hashish shipment and truck it east. Kilograms of heroin are smuggled through Sydney Customs and distributed through Chinatowns nationwide. Meanwhile, another crate of stolen Harley-Davidson motorcycles is shipped to outlaw US bike gangs by their Australian brothers, an Asian tourist connected to the Singapore-based Sing Mah fraternity carries a package of blank credit cards through Brisbane Airport, and a group of teenage Thai girls disembark at Sydney, where they will join an illegal travelling brothel. In western Sydney, Vietnamese gang members organise who will collect the week's protection money while others travel to Melbourne for a series of kidnappings and home invasions. Tax-free: The tax-free contribution of $9 billion-pius a year to international crime coffers is broken down as: $3.5 billion (conservatively) from heroin; $1 billion from other drugs; $34 billion from copyright, credit card, other fraud and money laundering - and $1 billion through gambling, prostitution, protection rackets and ancillary organised criminal activities. In contrast, the annual amount spent on the entire Australian criminal justice system - state and federal police, customs and other law enforcement agencies, courts and prisons is $6.4 billion. The National Crime Authority, established in 1984 to co-ordinate and lead the fight against organised crime, has a staff of 400 and an annual budget of less than $40 million. Australia's value to organised crime goes deeper than its profit base. It is regarded as a safe haven - a place for Yakuza gangsters, Triad big brothers and Mafia capi to enjoy a spot of rest and recreation while they visit affiliates, organise enterprises and launder dirty money through property ventures and legal casinos. Law enforcement agencies are fighting a rearguard action against organised crime, their efforts diluted by inter-agency rivalry and the logistical difficulties inherent in challenging the diverse and secretive criminal structure. Each state has its own intelligence branch that collects data on criminal activities, while the Australian Federal Police strategic intelligence branch, Australian Bureau of Criminal Intelligence and the Office of Strategic Criminal Assessment collate data on a national level. The NCA, AFP and customs all have national responsibilities, while each state operates a drug enforcement agency and/or major crime commission. Sources say this system is too cumbersome. According to one senior police intelligence officer who asked not to be named, "There is little sharing of information and a lot of competition for resources. There is little co-ordinated effort. The crooks understand 'divide and conquer' - they know the various agencies compete against each other and they play on that. Occasionally they will sacrifice somebody to generate some good press for the law and keep everyone sweet. Most busts you hear about are often the result of tip-offs rather than good intelligence or detective work." Wasted: Debate also rages over whether resources are being wasted fighting drug crime. Lisa Maher, from the national Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at the University of NSW, believes drug prohibition has failed: "The current system isn't working. The more you press down on street-level drug crime, the more crime you get," she says. "Our research shows addicts commit $1.6 billion in property crime a year. In addition, 600 addicts are dying each year - almost two a day - from overdoses. I am not in favour of anything that makes drugs more available, but prohibition hasn't stopped anyone taking drugs; in fact the price of heroin has dropped from $40 a .03 gram cap in 1995 to $20 today. The heroin trial was a missed opportunity [state and federal politicians vetoed a proposal to provide prescribed heroin to 40 Canberra addicts in an effort to break their cycle of addiction and crime]. The trial would have given us empirical evidence and insight into community outcomes, personal health outcomes and market outcomes. We were not allowed to try and now we will never know." (Unfortunately, the heroin trial was doomed to fail; the US was furious when Australia mooted the idea, and sources have told The Bulletin that local politicians and diplomats were fearful Washington would impose trade, diplomatic and military sanctions if the trial proceeded.) Just as six o'clock closing fuelled the growth of organised crime in the 1920s through the spread of sly grog shops, many argue that prohibition has encouraged the spread of heroin addiction since the '70s. Former Queensland police officer Mike Enders, a lecturer in law enforcement at Charles Sturt University in NSW argues decriminalisation is a viable alternative. He says the Western world's "war on drugs" is largely posturing. "It is a myth that the United States and other Western governments are waging war on organised crime and drugs. The rhetoric has it that the US will pursue drug barons, but the reality is that the CIA is supporting South-East Asian drug lords because they are anti-Communist. Flawed: "Australia's position is equally flawed. Australian police largely focus their efforts on street crime, hammering the bottom out of the system, and rarely, if ever, get close to the Mr Bigs or Mr Big Enoughs. The proposed heroin trial was more of a threat to organised crime than any police action, because by decriminalising heroin you instantly pull the rug on a large percentage of organised crime's profit base. You also make heroin is a health issue instead of a law enforcement issue, freeing up police resources." There is no doubt police resources are stretched. Organised crime groups have the advantage, and are now moving to cement their hold on the potentially highly profitable area of high-tech fraud, especially E-fraud (electronic fraud). The global nature of communications systems such as the Internet presents enormous difficulties for law enforcement. How do you pursue the perpetrators of an E-fraud when their office is in cyberspace? And new players are poised to enter the game in Australia. The "violence-prone groups profile" prepared by local intelligence and security organisations lists 23 international extremist political or religious groups with a presence in Australia. These include the IRA, the Sri Lankan Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and Islamic resistance movement HAMAS. Like their counterparts in organised crime, these groups use Australia for R&R. They also recruit and raise funds here. What concerns law enforcement agencies is that some of these groups may turn bad. Enders believes Australia is facing a growth in the number of organised crime groups operating on Australian soil. "Political groups use crime to fund their struggle," he says. "When that struggle is won or lost, elements of the organisation invariably continue as an organised crime group. Many terrorist and fringe political groups already have a presence here." Peter Edwards, manager of the ABCI's intelligence branch, agrees crime group structures are becoming more complex. "The impact of organised crime on Australia is affected by new technologies and changing domestic and international social structures," he says. NCA chairman John Broome admits the fight is difficult, perhaps even unwinnable. "We are up against a large mountain with a pretty small shovel," he says. "Clearly we are not stopping drugs-no one is - and each kilo of heroin that hits Australia results in a lot of lives being screwed up. Organised crime is not harmless. It brings with it increased risks of personal threat and threat to society as a whole. And it isn't just about who nicked Mrs Smith's video - organised crime inevitably has widespread social consequences and undermines social cohesion. It leads to corruption and double standards. The rock has to be turned over." Money trail: "We are doing better now than we were five years ago. The fight against organised crime is not necessarily about locking people up. Crooks don't do crime because they are inherently evil, they do it because they want to make a great deal of money. The best way to catch them is to follow the money trail and instil a fear factor - increase the perception that there is a risk. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski