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Biggest ever haul of cocaine seized in Australia found on rural property in outer western Sydney

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Source : Perth Now news

A massive cocaine stockpile has been uncovered in a cluster of shipping containers at a property in Sydney’s outer west in what police describe as “the largest ever cocaine seizure in Australia”.

Australian Federal Police officers raided a semirural property in Londonderry on Friday, and a search of three shipping containers uncovered a 2.7 tonne stockpile of cocaine.

The packages were hidden in containers below false floorboards. NewsWire Handout Credit: NewsWire
The cocaine is valued at more than $800m. Picture: NewsWire Handout
The cocaine is valued at more than $800m. NewsWire Handout Credit: NewsWire

The powder blocks, estimated to be worth about $816m, had been hidden in small underground bunkers beneath the “false floors” of the containers.

An AFP spokesman said the cocaine could have been used in about three million street-level deals.

The operation is now considered the largest ever cocaine bust in Australian history. Picture: NewsWire Handout
The operation is now considered the largest ever cocaine bust in Australian history. NewsWire Handout Credit: NewsWire

During the raid, police say a 21-year-old Plumpton man and a 25-year-old Liverpool man attempted to flee officers on foot but were eventually arrested.

Both were charged with possessing a commercial quantity of an unlawfully imported border-controlled drug and were refused bail in court on Saturday.

The men are scheduled to appear next at Penrith Local Court on August 13.

The AFP spokesman said the cocaine had reached Australian shores through Midge Point in North Queensland and was transported to Sydney “at the behest of a Sydney organised crime group”.

No mention has yet been made as to which group is allegedly involved.

The drugs were allegedly imported through Far North Queensland. Picture: NewsWire Handout
The drugs were allegedly imported through Far North Queensland. NewsWire Handout Credit: NewsWire

AFP Commander Stephen Jay said it wasn’t uncommon for criminals to “go to extreme lengths and often risk their own lives” to conceal their drug-smuggling operations.

“This alleged plot to distribute nearly three tonnes of cocaine – by arranging for an international vessel to offload the drugs in northern Queensland before moving them into Sydney – demonstrates how highly organised and determined these criminal networks are and the extreme lengths they are willing to go to in pursuit of profit,” Commander Jay said.

“Investigations into the origin of the drugs remain ongoing, and we will work with our international and domestic law-enforcement partners to identify the criminal syndicates and anyone else involved in facilitating this alleged attempted drug import.

Several people have been arrested as part of Operation Minjiang. Picture: NewsWire Handout
Several people have been arrested as part of Operation Minjiang. NewsWire Handout Credit: NewsWire

“Let these arrests serve as a warning to those criminal syndicates plotting attempts to bring illicit substances into our country, we stand together ready to act and disrupt your criminal activities, together with our law enforcement partners.”

The Londonderry bust is the latest successful warrant served as part of the joint AFP and Queensland Police Service Operation Minjiang, which began in May after 40kg of cocaine was found near a boat ramp at Midge Point by QPS officers who were responding to reports of a burnt-out flatbed truck.

The find resulted in a national-scale operation that has resulted in at least nine people being charged in relation to the importation and transport of illicit substances up and down the east coast.