“He’s basically gone on site at nighttime with an angle grinder, and he’s cut into a gold room. A lot of our work is intelligence-based to get ahead of it,” Baylor said.
Loading
“We got a camera put in place so we knew who’s going to go there, and we got some amazing evidence – we use in our presentations – of this guy cutting into a gold room.”
Baylor said most gold-related crime wasn’t actually a heist of refined material, but the theft of equipment embedded with leftover gold from refining processes.
That is then refined in backyard operations.
He cited a recent example, where a six balaclava-clad men stole 800 kilograms worth of material from a shuttered gold mine mill in Coolgardie.
“Eight hundred kilos of gold-bearing material was left in a secure compound to be locked away the following day, and during that night we had a ute that came in, [then] six males in balaclavas came out, took the 800 kilos to a gold processor in town,” Baylor said.
“We were aware of where it was going, and we managed to recover that 800 kilos.”
While the gold price may not be linked to more criminal activity, there is money to be made from stolen gold, and Baylor said organised crime and the drug trade were closely linked to it.
“We do see a massive correlation between the gold trade and the drug trade in town,” he said.
“There is definitely an organised crime element, and some of our bigger ones, like the 800 kilos that we recovered from a processing plant recently, that was alleged members of an outlaw motorcycle gang,” he said.
Loading
The gold squad also investigates other crimes that happen on mine sites, including assaults and deaths.
They are also heavily involved in drug detection on WA mine sites.
Drugs – and drug debts – can lead to workers being “stood over” by organised crime figures, which flows on to more issues and potential criminal activity on site.
Another priority – backyard gold-refining operations – pose hazardous risks, given the refining process uses mercury and there is the potential for it to leach into surrounding areas.
The most famous recent example was an operation busted in Kalgoorlie in January last year, where police seized more than 30 tonnes of stolen gold-bearing ore, and the ChemCentre lab had to be called in to help clean up the mercury.
Baylor said the squad also recently busted a syndicate from Perth carrying out illicit processing.
“Again, it was down to intel that we discovered them, and we were able to get into it early and disrupt them enough that they’ve been charged with offences across mine sites as far apart as Merredin and Kambalda,” Baylor said.
Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.
Read the full article here













