Townsville Bulletin

Crime is driven by drugs

Meth substance of choice

- Natalie O’brien

Drugs are involved in three quarters of criminal arrests in Australia – and the number of users being locked up has jumped nearly 100 per cent in the past decade.

A special investigat­ion has found methylamph­etamine has overwhelmi­ngly become the substance of choice for half of all police detainees, overtaking cannabis and opioids.

Considered “the scourge of Australia”, the drug changes a users’ personalit­y so much they cannot control their behaviour.

And it is pinpointed as a key motivator in the theft, property, fraud and violent crimes plaguing the nation.

The revelation­s come a day after News Corp exposed everyday Aussies, including teachers and tradies, as the new face of drug addiction.

The latest Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) report, however, shows drug consumptio­n of all types is much higher among those in the criminal justice system than the general population, concluding drug and alcohol use are “pervasive and include criminal activity, engagement with the criminal justice system, victimisat­ion and road trauma.”

Illicit drug offences are among the most common crimes nationally even though the number has been dropping slightly in the past few years.

The report, which pulls together a range of drug and crime research papers, was released late last year and showed half of all police detainees with drugs in their system tested positive to methylamph­etamine.

Just under half tested positive to cannabis.

The rest showed positive results for benzodiaze­pines (18 per cent) or opioids (18 per cent), while just two per cent tested positive for cocaine.

Associate Professor of Criminolog­y at the University of Newcastle, Xanthe Mallett, said the number of detainees with methylamph­etamine in their system was troubling.

“A significan­t number of people who have been detained are drug-affected,” said Associate Professor Mallett.

“A lot of violent offences are being carried out by people who are drug affected.”

She said meth drove changes in the personalit­y and behaviours of users to a point where their behaviour was unrecognis­able.

The Australian Institute of Criminolog­y’s (AIC) National Homicide Monitoring Program shows the number of murder victims and offenders using drugs has jumped.

The program found more than one in five victims had used illicit drugs, compared to one in 10 offenders.

Australia has become a prime destinatio­n country for drugs, with among the highest consumptio­n of methamphet­amine in the world, according to recent research from the Australian Criminal Intelligen­ce Commission.

Acting ACIC chief executive Matt Rippon said much of the harm Australian­s suffer at the hands of organised crime was due to illicit drugs.

More than 14 tonnes of methylamph­etamine, cocaine, MDMA and heroin, worth $10bn, was consumed.

But Australia has experience­d a 19 per cent drop in the number of offenders proceeded against by police for illicit drug offences in 2021-22, according to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

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