logo
Cash, cars and contraband: tobacco raids target shops

Cash, cars and contraband: tobacco raids target shops

The Advertiser29-05-2025

A fake wall full of cash has been found along with a secret tobacco store in a crackdown on illegal traders.
Almost $500,000 in cash and assets including a top of the range Mercedes has been seized after Queensland launched raids on the tobacco black market.
Raids were carried out on more than 20 stores across the state's southeast after the shops were fined for selling illegal tobacco but failed to pay the penalties.
During one raid, police officers found the shop owner was trying to hide cash behind a fake wall in the back of their store.
Another was operating a hidden tobacco shop at the rear of their retail store.
Officers have seized $468,000 in cash and other assets, including a Mercedes AMG and an SUV, during the raids since early May.
"Our officers will continue to ensure these debtors face consequences by seizing their cash and other property until these debts are paid," State Penalties Enforcement Registry director Kim Easton said.
It comes months after a Queensland Health operation seized more than 76,000 vapes, 19 million illicit cigarettes and 3.6 tonnes of loose illicit tobacco.
The haul had an estimated street value of $20.8 million.
Queensland introduced nation-leading fines for retail store operators who sold illegal tobacco and vapes in April.
Individuals can be fined $32,260, up from $3226, and corporations can be slapped with $161,300, up from $16,130.
It follows laws introduced in September, enabling authorities to close offending businesses for up to six months - a penalty no other state has introduced.
Treasurer David Janetzki said a number of stores had chosen to close permanently due to the recent enforcement actions.
"We'll continue to support SPER and other agencies so they can use their full powers under the law to prevent chop shops from selling illegal tobacco and vapes, particularly to young Queenslanders," he said.
Illegal tobacco sales have prompted violence in southern states, with more than 100 firebombings in Victoria in two years, while seven men have been arrested across Sydney over the theft of illegal cigarettes and chop-chop, or loose tobacco, in the past year.
It is believed the attacks and thefts are a result of ongoing wars between criminal gangs over illegal tobacco profits.
A fake wall full of cash has been found along with a secret tobacco store in a crackdown on illegal traders.
Almost $500,000 in cash and assets including a top of the range Mercedes has been seized after Queensland launched raids on the tobacco black market.
Raids were carried out on more than 20 stores across the state's southeast after the shops were fined for selling illegal tobacco but failed to pay the penalties.
During one raid, police officers found the shop owner was trying to hide cash behind a fake wall in the back of their store.
Another was operating a hidden tobacco shop at the rear of their retail store.
Officers have seized $468,000 in cash and other assets, including a Mercedes AMG and an SUV, during the raids since early May.
"Our officers will continue to ensure these debtors face consequences by seizing their cash and other property until these debts are paid," State Penalties Enforcement Registry director Kim Easton said.
It comes months after a Queensland Health operation seized more than 76,000 vapes, 19 million illicit cigarettes and 3.6 tonnes of loose illicit tobacco.
The haul had an estimated street value of $20.8 million.
Queensland introduced nation-leading fines for retail store operators who sold illegal tobacco and vapes in April.
Individuals can be fined $32,260, up from $3226, and corporations can be slapped with $161,300, up from $16,130.
It follows laws introduced in September, enabling authorities to close offending businesses for up to six months - a penalty no other state has introduced.
Treasurer David Janetzki said a number of stores had chosen to close permanently due to the recent enforcement actions.
"We'll continue to support SPER and other agencies so they can use their full powers under the law to prevent chop shops from selling illegal tobacco and vapes, particularly to young Queenslanders," he said.
Illegal tobacco sales have prompted violence in southern states, with more than 100 firebombings in Victoria in two years, while seven men have been arrested across Sydney over the theft of illegal cigarettes and chop-chop, or loose tobacco, in the past year.
It is believed the attacks and thefts are a result of ongoing wars between criminal gangs over illegal tobacco profits.
A fake wall full of cash has been found along with a secret tobacco store in a crackdown on illegal traders.
Almost $500,000 in cash and assets including a top of the range Mercedes has been seized after Queensland launched raids on the tobacco black market.
Raids were carried out on more than 20 stores across the state's southeast after the shops were fined for selling illegal tobacco but failed to pay the penalties.
During one raid, police officers found the shop owner was trying to hide cash behind a fake wall in the back of their store.
Another was operating a hidden tobacco shop at the rear of their retail store.
Officers have seized $468,000 in cash and other assets, including a Mercedes AMG and an SUV, during the raids since early May.
"Our officers will continue to ensure these debtors face consequences by seizing their cash and other property until these debts are paid," State Penalties Enforcement Registry director Kim Easton said.
It comes months after a Queensland Health operation seized more than 76,000 vapes, 19 million illicit cigarettes and 3.6 tonnes of loose illicit tobacco.
The haul had an estimated street value of $20.8 million.
Queensland introduced nation-leading fines for retail store operators who sold illegal tobacco and vapes in April.
Individuals can be fined $32,260, up from $3226, and corporations can be slapped with $161,300, up from $16,130.
It follows laws introduced in September, enabling authorities to close offending businesses for up to six months - a penalty no other state has introduced.
Treasurer David Janetzki said a number of stores had chosen to close permanently due to the recent enforcement actions.
"We'll continue to support SPER and other agencies so they can use their full powers under the law to prevent chop shops from selling illegal tobacco and vapes, particularly to young Queenslanders," he said.
Illegal tobacco sales have prompted violence in southern states, with more than 100 firebombings in Victoria in two years, while seven men have been arrested across Sydney over the theft of illegal cigarettes and chop-chop, or loose tobacco, in the past year.
It is believed the attacks and thefts are a result of ongoing wars between criminal gangs over illegal tobacco profits.
A fake wall full of cash has been found along with a secret tobacco store in a crackdown on illegal traders.
Almost $500,000 in cash and assets including a top of the range Mercedes has been seized after Queensland launched raids on the tobacco black market.
Raids were carried out on more than 20 stores across the state's southeast after the shops were fined for selling illegal tobacco but failed to pay the penalties.
During one raid, police officers found the shop owner was trying to hide cash behind a fake wall in the back of their store.
Another was operating a hidden tobacco shop at the rear of their retail store.
Officers have seized $468,000 in cash and other assets, including a Mercedes AMG and an SUV, during the raids since early May.
"Our officers will continue to ensure these debtors face consequences by seizing their cash and other property until these debts are paid," State Penalties Enforcement Registry director Kim Easton said.
It comes months after a Queensland Health operation seized more than 76,000 vapes, 19 million illicit cigarettes and 3.6 tonnes of loose illicit tobacco.
The haul had an estimated street value of $20.8 million.
Queensland introduced nation-leading fines for retail store operators who sold illegal tobacco and vapes in April.
Individuals can be fined $32,260, up from $3226, and corporations can be slapped with $161,300, up from $16,130.
It follows laws introduced in September, enabling authorities to close offending businesses for up to six months - a penalty no other state has introduced.
Treasurer David Janetzki said a number of stores had chosen to close permanently due to the recent enforcement actions.
"We'll continue to support SPER and other agencies so they can use their full powers under the law to prevent chop shops from selling illegal tobacco and vapes, particularly to young Queenslanders," he said.
Illegal tobacco sales have prompted violence in southern states, with more than 100 firebombings in Victoria in two years, while seven men have been arrested across Sydney over the theft of illegal cigarettes and chop-chop, or loose tobacco, in the past year.
It is believed the attacks and thefts are a result of ongoing wars between criminal gangs over illegal tobacco profits.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

15 leafy suburbs young Aussies can afford
15 leafy suburbs young Aussies can afford

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

15 leafy suburbs young Aussies can afford

The dream of living in a blue-chip suburb is still in reach for younger Australians if they're willing to trade in a house for a unit, fresh data from real estate titan Ray White has revealed. While house prices remain at astronomical levels across much of the country's prime real estate, the gap in price between houses and units is wide enough in a host of up-market suburbs to make unit living affordable for first-home buyers. In Melbourne's iconic Hawthorn South, characterised by its vast patchwork of cafes, restaurants, heritage-listed buildings and elegant park spaces, median house prices are at $2.48m, but units are priced at $560,368, a massive $1.92m difference in cost. In Sydney's Homebush, which sits adjacent to the iconic Sydney Markets and Bicentennial Park, houses are priced at $2.24m, while units are priced at $677,393, for a $1.56m gap. Brisbane's riverside Hamilton, adorned with swanky Queenslanders and opulent modernist structures, houses go for $2.26m while units are listed at $717,358. 15 Blue Chip Suburbs for First Home Buyers Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee told NewsWire apartments offered Australians in their 20s and 30s a chance to live in suburbs with 'better amenity' as houses move beyond reach. 'To get an apartment, you might be closer to good retail precincts, better public transport, closer to your work,' she said. 'Also potentially to family and friends. I think this is one of the challenges a lot of younger people have. 'They may have grown up in an area but when they are looking to buy now, it's really expensive, but in some areas, there are definitely apartments available at a much more affordable price.' Ms Conisbee added solving Australia's affordability crisis would entail a greater shift to apartment living, even as builders continue to pump out four-bedroom homes that exceed the size of many emerging families. 'Australia is very unusual globally in that we have incredibly low densities,' she said. There's a massive gap in median house and unit prices for Melbourne's tram-lined Hawthorn suburb. Supplied Credit: Supplied 'If you have a look at every other major city and even much smaller cities, they do have very high levels of high densities. 'We can't provide affordable housing in areas that have incredible amenity if we stick to the big homes in the future.' Every major city shows savings of at least $500,000 with an apartment buy over a house. In Adelaide's Walkerville, a tree-lined inner-north suburb, houses sit at $1.6m, while units are going for $604,328, a saving of nearly a million dollars. In Perth's beachside Mosman Park, houses are priced at $2.51m, while units are priced at $551,561, a near $2m difference. In Darwin's Larrakeyah, houses are $1.45m while units are $440,907. Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee says the kind of up-market amenity in leafy city suburbs are still within reach for first-home buyers. Supplied Credit: Supplied In Canberra's Reid, houses are $2.19m, while units are $617,050. Queensland's glittery Gold Coast, however, shows a smaller gap between house and unit prices compared to other major cities. In Southport, houses are $1.05m, while units are $637,051, for a $410,669 gap. Regional cities in popular coastal locations also present substantial gaps between house and unit prices. In the Sunshine Coast's Buderim suburb, which borders the Maroochydore and Mooloolaba beaches north of Brisbane, houses are priced at $1.3m, while units are going for $732,921. In Port Douglas, a Coral Sea town in Queensland's far north that faces out to the Great Barrier Reef, houses are listed at $1.71m, while units are $490,372.

Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal
Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal

The Advertiser

timea day ago

  • The Advertiser

Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal

The director of a state-run forensic testing lab has been suspended and will be asked to explain why they should not be removed in the latest scandal over botched DNA sampling. It follows a pause in testing sparked by the identification of contamination issues at Forensic Science Queensland, Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said on Friday. "This action was taken following advice I received today that (Forensic Science Queensland) was placing a general pause on routine DNA testing after contamination issues were identified," she said. The pause will be reviewed after seven days as the lab determines next steps. Urgent matters will progress in a limited capacity with appropriate controls, Ms Frecklington said. Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 following multiple inquiries, one of which revealed a "fundamentally flawed" automated DNA extraction method might have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007. Many samples went untested while others were incorrectly ruled insufficient, an earlier inquiry found. The inquiries also elicited characterisations of a "toxic" culture at the state-run forensic lab. More than 40,000 samples fell within the scope of a historical review process, of which close to 10,000 had been reviewed as of May. Linzi Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September after serving as interim chief executive. Dr Wilson-Wilde was stepping into "what will undoubtedly be a very challenging role", Ms Frecklington said at the time. Following news of the testing pause, Ms Frecklington moved to immediately suspend her, pending a show cause notice for removal. "I want to assure Queenslanders the Crisafulli government remains firmly committed to fixing the long-standing issues at Forensic Science Queensland," she said. The director of a state-run forensic testing lab has been suspended and will be asked to explain why they should not be removed in the latest scandal over botched DNA sampling. It follows a pause in testing sparked by the identification of contamination issues at Forensic Science Queensland, Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said on Friday. "This action was taken following advice I received today that (Forensic Science Queensland) was placing a general pause on routine DNA testing after contamination issues were identified," she said. The pause will be reviewed after seven days as the lab determines next steps. Urgent matters will progress in a limited capacity with appropriate controls, Ms Frecklington said. Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 following multiple inquiries, one of which revealed a "fundamentally flawed" automated DNA extraction method might have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007. Many samples went untested while others were incorrectly ruled insufficient, an earlier inquiry found. The inquiries also elicited characterisations of a "toxic" culture at the state-run forensic lab. More than 40,000 samples fell within the scope of a historical review process, of which close to 10,000 had been reviewed as of May. Linzi Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September after serving as interim chief executive. Dr Wilson-Wilde was stepping into "what will undoubtedly be a very challenging role", Ms Frecklington said at the time. Following news of the testing pause, Ms Frecklington moved to immediately suspend her, pending a show cause notice for removal. "I want to assure Queenslanders the Crisafulli government remains firmly committed to fixing the long-standing issues at Forensic Science Queensland," she said. The director of a state-run forensic testing lab has been suspended and will be asked to explain why they should not be removed in the latest scandal over botched DNA sampling. It follows a pause in testing sparked by the identification of contamination issues at Forensic Science Queensland, Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said on Friday. "This action was taken following advice I received today that (Forensic Science Queensland) was placing a general pause on routine DNA testing after contamination issues were identified," she said. The pause will be reviewed after seven days as the lab determines next steps. Urgent matters will progress in a limited capacity with appropriate controls, Ms Frecklington said. Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 following multiple inquiries, one of which revealed a "fundamentally flawed" automated DNA extraction method might have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007. Many samples went untested while others were incorrectly ruled insufficient, an earlier inquiry found. The inquiries also elicited characterisations of a "toxic" culture at the state-run forensic lab. More than 40,000 samples fell within the scope of a historical review process, of which close to 10,000 had been reviewed as of May. Linzi Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September after serving as interim chief executive. Dr Wilson-Wilde was stepping into "what will undoubtedly be a very challenging role", Ms Frecklington said at the time. Following news of the testing pause, Ms Frecklington moved to immediately suspend her, pending a show cause notice for removal. "I want to assure Queenslanders the Crisafulli government remains firmly committed to fixing the long-standing issues at Forensic Science Queensland," she said. The director of a state-run forensic testing lab has been suspended and will be asked to explain why they should not be removed in the latest scandal over botched DNA sampling. It follows a pause in testing sparked by the identification of contamination issues at Forensic Science Queensland, Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said on Friday. "This action was taken following advice I received today that (Forensic Science Queensland) was placing a general pause on routine DNA testing after contamination issues were identified," she said. The pause will be reviewed after seven days as the lab determines next steps. Urgent matters will progress in a limited capacity with appropriate controls, Ms Frecklington said. Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 following multiple inquiries, one of which revealed a "fundamentally flawed" automated DNA extraction method might have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007. Many samples went untested while others were incorrectly ruled insufficient, an earlier inquiry found. The inquiries also elicited characterisations of a "toxic" culture at the state-run forensic lab. More than 40,000 samples fell within the scope of a historical review process, of which close to 10,000 had been reviewed as of May. Linzi Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September after serving as interim chief executive. Dr Wilson-Wilde was stepping into "what will undoubtedly be a very challenging role", Ms Frecklington said at the time. Following news of the testing pause, Ms Frecklington moved to immediately suspend her, pending a show cause notice for removal. "I want to assure Queenslanders the Crisafulli government remains firmly committed to fixing the long-standing issues at Forensic Science Queensland," she said.

Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal
Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Lab boss suspended in latest DNA contamination scandal

The director of a state-run forensic testing lab has been suspended and will be asked to explain why they should not be removed in the latest scandal over botched DNA sampling. It follows a pause in testing sparked by the identification of contamination issues at Forensic Science Queensland, Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said on Friday. "This action was taken following advice I received today that (Forensic Science Queensland) was placing a general pause on routine DNA testing after contamination issues were identified," she said. The pause will be reviewed after seven days as the lab determines next steps. Urgent matters will progress in a limited capacity with appropriate controls, Ms Frecklington said. Forensic Science Queensland was established in 2023 following multiple inquiries, one of which revealed a "fundamentally flawed" automated DNA extraction method might have led to offenders potentially escaping conviction for nine years from 2007. Many samples went untested while others were incorrectly ruled insufficient, an earlier inquiry found. The inquiries also elicited characterisations of a "toxic" culture at the state-run forensic lab. More than 40,000 samples fell within the scope of a historical review process, of which close to 10,000 had been reviewed as of May. Linzi Wilson-Wilde was appointed director in September after serving as interim chief executive. Dr Wilson-Wilde was stepping into "what will undoubtedly be a very challenging role", Ms Frecklington said at the time. Following news of the testing pause, Ms Frecklington moved to immediately suspend her, pending a show cause notice for removal. "I want to assure Queenslanders the Crisafulli government remains firmly committed to fixing the long-standing issues at Forensic Science Queensland," she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store