Mercury (Hobart)

Failed bid to pick up parcel of ecstasy pills

- AMBER WILSON

A GOODWOOD woman who tried to collect a parcel containing 3244 ecstasy tablets from the Glenorchy post office later admitted she had made some “stupid decisions” for cash.

Ellen Lucia Smitti, 29, said she was to be paid $250 for receiving the parcel — worth up to $162,000 — and that it would only be in her possession for a short time.

In May last year, Australia Post workers detected “irregulari­ties” in the express post package and it was seized by police.

Smitti went to the post office three times between May 11 and 16, inquiring about the package, before police arranged a substitute package to be sent in its place.

After Smitti collected the substitute package, officers searched her home and found the parcel along with 6.5 grams of cannabis on her mirror stand and 1.5 grams of cannabis in her bedside drawer.

They also located a sachet with 0.2 grams of ice in her handbag, two straws containing traces of the drug, and three smoking devices.

When she was interviewe­d, Smitti said she was addicted to ice and cannabis, but denied she was expecting to receive the MDMA parcel.

But, a few hours later, she admitted she knew about the parcel and said her financial situation had made her make “stupid decisions”.

She pleaded guilty to a traffickin­g charge, along with drug use and possession charges.

Acting Justice David Porter, sentencing Smitti this week, said her father had died when she was 26, and that in her “profound grief” she had turned to illicit substances for comfort.

“I am told that her financial situation and living arrangemen­ts were such that she was quite desperate for money,” Acting Justice Porter said.

He said Smitti didn’t realise the quantity of drugs involved, but was “completely reckless” as to the amount or type of substance. She was given a 10month suspended sentence with a 12-month community correction order, including 50 hours of community service.

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