Six people have been charged after Australian authorities uncovered a multimillion-dollar crime syndicate stealing baby formula and vitamins from major retailers across Sydney for shipment to China, police said yesterday.
Four members of one family and two other men have been arrested and charged over the “organized criminal group” that New South Wales Police believe has operated for several years.
“We’re thinking this is quite an expansive criminal group that was exploiting an overseas market at the disadvantage of the Australian public,” Detective Superintendent Danny Doherty told reporters in Sydney.
Doherty said investigators were still investigating where the products were being sold, but claimed that, so far, “thousands of shipments of baby formula were sent to China.”
Premium baby milk formula, vitamins and honey from Australia are highly sought after in China, where consumers are fearful of lax food safety standards that have resulted in deaths and health scares.
The investigation was begun in February last year after police received reports of thefts from Sydney retailers.
Investigators said they searched two Sydney homes in August and seized 4,000 tins of baby formula, “large quantities” of vitamins, manuka honey, as well as more than A$215,000 (US$154,068) in cash.
The latest arrest was of a 31-year-old man on Saturday at Sydney Airport after he arrived on a flight from China.
“It’s been a meticulous investigation ... and we anticipate additional arrests will happen,” Doherty said, adding that police estimated about A$1 million worth of powdered milk was stolen in just the past 12 months.
“Police will continue to pursue these people, because not only are they making a quick dollar out of greed and disadvantaging mums and dads of Australia, they are literally taking baby formula out of the mouths of babes,” Doherty added.
There is also a growing gray market in Australia where purchasing agents known as daigou help Chinese customers secure products in Australia by buying them from local shops and shipping them to China, raking in a tidy profit in the process.
The demand, particularly for baby formula, has been so high in Australia that some supermarket giants have imposed limits on purchases, or moved the milk behind the counter.
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