REVEALED: BOMBER TRIED TO VISIT INMATE LINKED TO DRUGS, SEX WORK
Bomber had pink case
TROUBLED football great Mark “Bomber” Thompson was turned away from an immigration detention centre after trying to visit an inmate involved in drugs and sex work.
It can be revealed Thompson arrived at the Maribyrnong Immigration Detention Centre late last year, where he was recognised by staff and visitors.
The former star player and coach was seeking to visit a foreign-born criminal who was awaiting deportation after being linked to drugs and “sex work-type activities”, according to sources.
One source said Thompson was delivering a “pink case” to the inmate, but he was turned away by security guards before he could enter. It is not clear why he was rejected.
The revelation comes after Thompson was swept up in a Victoria Police investigation into drug trafficking last week, with officers raiding his converted warehouse in Port Melbourne.
Family, friends and former teammates have raised concerns for the wellbeing of the former Essendon captain who coached Geelong to two premierships.
Immigration detention is used to lock up “high-risk unlawful non-citizens” who do not have a valid visa and are awaiting deportation. Authorities consider whether an individual presents a risk to the Australian community before they are detained.
Under Australian Border Force rules, anyone who visits an immigration detention facility must go through a strict security screening process.
This may include substance detection methods, including the use of detector dogs, and visitors may have their belongings X-rayed.
Thompson declined to comment on his involvement in the drug-trafficking investigation on Thursday, when he emerged from his home on a bike about 11am.
Thompson handed himself into police voluntarily on Tuesday and was questioned and released without charge.
Thomas Windsor, 28, who is understood to have been living at Thompson’s warehouse, has been charged with trafficking a drug of dependence.
Windsor is alleged to have links to the Rebels bikie gang. Another man, Karl Holt, who is alleged to have links to the Bandidos bikie gang, was also charged with trafficking a drug of dependence.