MGA Independent Retailer Magazine - February 2021 - Issue 1

Page 33

VICTORIA INDUSTRY NEWS

33

NATIONAL

Jail for masterminds of record WA cigarette importation Story source© Australian Border Force Newsroom

The two masterminds behind an attempt to smuggle a record-breaking 9.5 million cigarettes into Western Australia from Vietnam have been sentenced to almost five years jail. The importation remains the biggest illicit cigarette detection in WA and represents an attempt to evade more than $8.5 million in Duty and GST. Australian Border Force (ABF) officers intercepted the consignment at the Fremantle Container Examination Facility on 31 October 2018. Anomalies were identified when the 40-foot container was x-rayed, and an ABF detector dog also gave a reaction indicating the presence of tobacco. The physical examination of the container revealed an initial layer of boxes of plastic panels, but behind that officers found the rest of it packed full of boxes of cigarettes manufactured in South East Asia. The final count was 47,500 cartons of cigarettes, worth more than $7.66 million in evaded duty and $862,000 of GST. On 16 November 2020, the two men, who are cousins aged 31 and 38, each pleaded guilty in the Perth Magistrates Court to one count of Importing Tobacco Products with the Intention of Defrauding the Revenue under section 233BABAD (2A) of the Customs Act 1901. On the same day, a third man, aged 47, pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of importing goods, being tobacco products, being reckless as to whether there would be defrauding of the revenue, contrary to s 233BABAD(2A) of the Customs Act 1901. On 19 November 2020, he was sentenced in the Perth District Court to two years and four months jail but released

Record WA illicit cigarette seizure Image source© Australian Border Force Newsroom

forthwith on a $3,000 recognisance to be of good behaviour for a period of two years. Today in the Perth District Court, the two masterminds were each jailed for four years and ten months, with a minimum period of two years before becoming eligible for parole. ABF Acting Commander of Operations West, Felicity Horrocks, acknowledged the combined efforts of the officers at the container examination facility who made the detection, and the investigators who pulled together the brief of evidence. “This was a big case by every measure, with investigators executing 12 warrants in the ten months following the detection,” Acting Commander Horrocks said. “As we’ve said many times before, tobacco and cigarette smuggling is not a victimless crime - with profits from illegal sales in Australia often being used to fund other criminal activity both here and overseas. “Detecting, investigating and disrupting the illegal tobacco trade is an operational priority for the ABF.” The maximum penalty for tobacco smuggling is ten years imprisonment and/

or a fine of up to five times the amount of duty evaded. Last financial year (2019/20) the ABF seized more than 177 tonnes of loose-leaf tobacco and 422 million cigarettes, with the amount of duty evaded totalling some $611 million. The ABF continues to implement illicit tobacco measures as part of its frontline border law enforcement and customs activities to protect the integrity of Australia’s borders and through its leadership of the Illicit Tobacco Taskforce (ITTF). The ITTF brings together the ABF, the Department of Home Affairs, the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission, the Australian Taxation Office, the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre. The ITTF enhances the whole-ofgovernment response by proactively targeting, disrupting, and dismantling criminal syndicates dealing in illicit tobacco. MGA encourages members with information on the illegal importation of illicit tobacco to contact Border Watch at www.australia.gov.au/borderwatch. This can be done anonymously.


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Articles inside

Are you prepared for La Niña?

2min
page 39

Asahi Holdings Australia appoints new chairman

1min
page 44

Bond Seven, new look, same delicious taste

0
page 41

Implementing Risk Management into your business

6min
pages 37-38

Small business sector demonstrates resilience in COVID crisis: report

2min
page 16

SPAR Supermarkets Australia celebrates 10 years

0
page 32

IGA Mascot NSW

3min
pages 30-31

Small actions can make a big difference - Sustainability in the workplace

5min
pages 34-35

Jail for masterminds of record WA cigarette importation

2min
page 33

Provans scholarships

2min
page 36

Queensland - It’s the last straw for single-use plastics

1min
page 29

WA Minister for Small Business Paul Papalia thanks MGA WA Director Ross Anile

0
page 28

MGA TMA - Waste and the Australian Circular Economy

3min
pages 17-18

WA CDS - Letter from Michael Rowe

1min
page 27

Circular Economy Solution insights - Packaging

0
page 19

Long-awaited Illicit Tobacco Report released

2min
page 26

MGA TMA voices concern over proposed payments platform merger

4min
pages 14-15

CEO welcome

2min
page 5

Attorney General releases proposed Industrial Relations Reforms that will benefit the Australian economy

3min
page 11

Looming changes for casual engagement

3min
page 8

Fairly Dismissed

3min
page 9

2020 MGA TMA National AGM and Industry Update – Australian Circular Economy Solutions

5min
pages 6-7

Ombudsman backs ACCC’s concerns over Woolworths’ PFD tilt

2min
page 13

Individual Flexibility Agreement. What are they and how are they created?

3min
page 10

Insolvency reforms a boost to small business owners

1min
page 12
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