Illicit tobacco and cash seized after warrants in eastern Victoria

Victoria Police in conjunction with Australian Border Force (ABF) executed search warrants and seized cigarettes, loose tobacco and cash following a joint operation targeting the selling and importation of illicit tobacco in regional Victoria.

Search warrants were executed at shops in Sydney and Maher Streets in Kilmore, Keith Street in Seymour and Nunn Street in Benalla last Friday morning (14 June).

Investigators located quantities of cigarettes, loose tobacco and cash at each of the premises.

A quantity of glass smoking pipes was also seized from the store in Seymour.

A second warrant executed at a secure storage facility in Kilmore resulted in the seizure of a large amount of illicit tobacco.

It is alleged that the tobacco was smuggled into the country avoiding custom taxes.

A 31-year-old Shepparton man and a 21 year-old-Kialla woman were interviewed and will be summonsed to appear at a Magistrates’ Court for offences under the Customs Act and for possessing proceeds of crime.

A 40-year-old Kilmore woman was interviewed and will be summonsed to appear at a Magistrates’ Court for offences under the Customs Act and for possessing the proceeds of crime.

A 64-year-old Benalla woman was interviewed and will be summonsed to appear at a Magistrates’ Court for offences under the Customs Act and for possessing the proceeds of crime.

Members from Kilmore Police, Seymour Police, Seymour Divisional Tasking Unit, Benalla Crime Investigation Unit and the Australian Border Force were involved in the execution of the warrants in this joint operation.

Detective Senior Sergeant Paul Maher from Victoria Police Mitchell Crime Investigation Unit said, “the sale of illicit tobacco and its links to further criminality can have a significant negative impact to rural communities and businesses. Victoria Police will continue to be relentless in its investigation of this illicit trade and I assure the public that this will not be tolerated in our regional community.”

Acting ABF Special Operations Commander, Colin Drysdale, said the operation was a great start to shutting down the supply of illicit tobacco in regional Victoria, and the two agencies will continue to disrupt the supply and dismantle the criminal syndicates that support it.

“People need to be aware of what they’re buying and its greater links to criminality – not only is the profit of illicit tobacco under the counter robbing the Commonwealth of revenue, its usually funnelled back to organised criminal syndicates that are involved in drug trafficking and money laundering.” acting Commander Drysdale said.

/Public Release. View in full here.