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Friday, October 6, 2017

Australia Court Set To Jail Nigerian Student Who Used A Fish To Import $10million Worth Of Drugs

An Australian court will sentence a Nigerian post-graduate student, Jackson Igwebuike on 25 October, after he was found guilty of importing methamphetamine worth $10million to Canberra.
The drug, worth N3.6 billion was imported by Igwebuike to Canberra in ornate golden fish statues in October 2015, but alert security men intercepted the drugs and substituted the ice before he collected the parcel. The drug could have had “calamitous consequences” if sold in the community, federal prosecutors told the court.


Lawyers for the 34 year-old Nigerian, a graduate of University of Benin, agreed he acted as “more than just a mere courier” when he accepted delivery of about 8.47 grams of pure ice before he attempted to board a Murrays bus to Sydney with the drugs in his bag.


An ACT Supreme Court jury found him guilty of importing a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug in August.


His trial heard the drugs were discovered when three 20 kilogram statues that arrived in a shipping crate from China were X-rayed by officers at Port Botany on October 8. Inside one statue of a fish they found 43 packages that contained a combined total of 10.58 kilograms of methamphetamine.


Federal police had swapped the drugs with an “inert substance” before the fish statue was put back together and repacked.


Taps of Igwebuike’s phones picked up communication between the accused and another man in Igbo and with a freight company based in Sydney.
Prosecutors said Igwebuike used the name “Solomon David” and asked the company for the package to be delivered to an address in Kaleen.


Undercover police later watched as the packages were delivered to the address and collected by Igwebuike, who took them to a second address in the same suburb.


In a phone conversation with another man soon after, Igwebuike discussed transport and meeting places in Sydney.


He was arrested as he stood in a queue at the Jolimont Centre for a Murrays bus to Sydney on October 17. Police seized a suitcase filled with 43 packages of the drug substitute.


Igwebuike said he hadn’t known the statues had been filled with drugs. He said he’d been approached by two men in a carpark and asked to pick up some decorative glass items.


Those men later showed up at his house after he had collected the parcels and broke the statues open, before threatening to kill his wife and destroy him if he didn’t take the drugs to Sydney, he said.


Commonwealth prosecutor Edward Chen told a sentence hearing on Tuesday that Igwebuike had maintained he had been doing a favour for a friend and wouldn’t admit he committed the crime for profit.

NAN

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