Tobacco
Frauds. £600 Fine in N.S.W. 6
April 1945 The West Australian |
Making "Bootleg" Leaf. Sydney.
April 5. A Commonwealth Crown Law Department officer
said today that inquiries by the special investigation branch of the
Customs Department had revealed the greatest revenue frauds in the
manufacture and sale of tobacco in the history of Australia. At Tumut police court today Dang Charlie
Doon, wool and skin merchant, was fined £500 with costs on a charge
under section 35 of the Excise Act for unlawfully having manufactured
2.1041b of tobacco. Doon was also fined £100 and costs on
a charge of having unlawfully conveyed excisable tobacco. Mr J. C. Braund,
who prosecuted, said that an agent named Robert Baden Chinnery, who was employed by Doon when arrested at
Wagga, had 501b of tobacco in his possession which he (Chinnery)
described as "bootleg" tobacco. Subsequent inquiries revealed that the
tobacco had been distributed to merchants in 10 southern and
Riverina towns where it was sold by well-known retailers at the
ordinary price of duty-paid tobacco. The duty of which the revenue had been
defrauded amounted to more than £1,100. |