Sunday Territorian

Don’t risk life for shonky goods

It’s a deadly game if you fake it till you make it

- NATALIE O’BRIEN

FAKE erectile dysfunctio­n tablets, cosmetics containing mercury and arsenic, chainsaws that snap under stress and brake pads made of asbestos are just some of the dangerous goods being seized at our borders.

The black market for counterfei­t goods is now more profitable than drugs and booming, with hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of fake – and potentiall­y deadly – products being smuggled in. In the past 12 months alone, Australian Border Force officers seized d 141,000 of them worth more than $63m.

Law enforcemen­t nt agencies warn it could be e just the tip of the trade e as bikie gangs and crime me groups pivot their ir global business s models for lucrative e returns. The OECD D now estimates pirat- ed wares are worth h about 3.3 per cent of the total global goods oods and services trade.

Experts like former rmer US police detective sergeant, David Lake, who has spent years researchin­g the criminal shadow economy – illicit, forprofit activity that exists alongside a country’s official economy – said drug barons were diversifyi­ng while still moving drugs.

Mr Lake said they were using their existing drug traffickin­g networks to shift the counterfei­t stock in a market considered very highprofit and low-risk. “Counterfei­t goods are significan­tly more profitable than drugs and have a much larger consumer base with much less enforcemen­t,” Mr Lake said.

Australian Border Force Assistant Secretary Customs and Trade Policy Kimberlee Stamatis said they had found everything from designer handbags to mobile phones, watches, power tools and pharmaceut­icals being smuggled in all sorts of different ways. “The criminals are getting very sophistica­ted and they are always looking for a new way to conceal the goods,” oods, Ms Stamatis said. d.

One of the he most commonly counterfei­ted items ems is a smarrtrt- smartphone charger known to have caused fatal fires around the world.

It’s not the only potentiall­y deadly rip-off.

The Sunday Territoria­n has learnt: POWER tool company Stihl issued a warning about dangerous copies of their chainsaws being sold on the black market – often with faulty or absent safety-critical devices; WHEN put to the test, counterfei­t brake pads – made of asbestos and compressed grass clippings – overshot stop markers; BOGUS BO car rims sh shattered in potholes at a low speed; KNOCK-OFF oil filters did not work; and

DODGY spark plugs pl had the potential tia to cause extensive engine engi damage. Mercedes-Benz Me seized almost two tw million counterfei­t products in i 2021 during 650 global law enforcemen­t raids.

Toyota busted two suppliers in Australia after discoverin­g hundreds of fake parts. It also identified about 1200 online listings per month for knocked-off goods.

Ms Stamatis said officers were trained to spot the fakes but tips to the Border Watch hotline and intelligen­ce helped them foil the shipments. “Fake goods are not a “victimless crime” Ms Stamatis said. “There is evidence to suggest the trade is exploiting vulnerable workers in modern slavery conditions and funding organised crime, including terrorism.”

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime DOC has long warned that traditiona­l organised

crime groups like the Neapolitan Camorra, and the ‘Ndrangheta (Calabrian mafia) have a history of selling designer knock-offs and now have establishe­d extensive contacts with Chinese groups to import counterfei­ts. Despite the vigilance of authoritie­s, fakes are still making it into the country. In the past three years, South Australian police have made 187 different seizures of suspected fake Xanax.

Companies’ whose goods are being counterfei­ted often hire private detectives to launch a sting and find out who is behind the crimes.

David King from Lipstick investigat­ions said he has been involved in a lot of operationa­l stake-outs to find counterfei­t goods.

“A lot of work that goes into finding the goods, buying them and then proving they are fake, and then trying to identify the source,” Mr King said.

Investigat­or Ken Gamble has also looked at large-scale counterfei­t pharmaceut­ical production in the Philippine­s, where major crime lords rule. The drugs ranged from fake anti-inflammato­ries to sleeping pills, but Mr Gamble said the real money came from sexual enhancemen­t drugs.

“It is a very corrupt industry. It is a big supply chain … they have to get people in ports and customs,” he said.

The Therapeuti­c Goods Authority has helped seize 340,572 counterfei­t products in recent years including erectile dysfunctio­n pills, weight loss products, ivermectin, skin whitening and nicotine vaping products.

A Canberra newsagency was this year fined $26,640 for the alleged unlawful supply of counterfei­t nicotine vaping products.

Brisbane man Jeffrey Croucher, the director of HealthHub2­47 Pty Ltd, was convicted on 35 charges of the unlawful manufactur­e, counterfei­t, advertisin­g and supply of sports supplement­s that contain banned and dangerous substances.

 ?? ?? Stihl issued a public warning about dangerous copies of their chainsaws.
South Australian police have made 187 different seizures of suspected fake Xanax.
Australian Border Force Assistant Secretary Customs and Trade Policy, Kimberlee Stamatis.
Stihl issued a public warning about dangerous copies of their chainsaws. South Australian police have made 187 different seizures of suspected fake Xanax. Australian Border Force Assistant Secretary Customs and Trade Policy, Kimberlee Stamatis.
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FAKE
 ?? ?? It’s no puzzle why crime gangs are upping their game with fake merchandis­e - it’s big bucks.
It’s no puzzle why crime gangs are upping their game with fake merchandis­e - it’s big bucks.

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