Home > Enablers of illicit drug trafficking by organised crime groups.

Morgan, Anthony and Dowling, Christopher (2023) Enablers of illicit drug trafficking by organised crime groups. Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology.

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In this study we explore the enablers of illicit drug trafficking using law enforcement intelligence data on a sample of 587 organised crime groups. We measure the prevalence of other forms of criminal activity and their relationship with poly-drug trafficking, which refers to the trafficking of multiple drug types and is associated with increased profitability, versatility and resilience to disruption.

Other forms of criminal activity— including enablers of illicit drug trafficking—were common. Half the groups (52%) were poly-drug traffickers. Groups suspected to have exploited or infiltrated the transport system (air, sea or surface) and those suspected of laundering money via the real estate market or gambling services were more likely to be trafficking multiple drug types. Groups that relied on these enabling activities were more likely to involve professional facilitators.

This research highlights a number of key enablers of organised crime that may be targeted to disrupt illicit drug trafficking.


Item Type
Report
Publication Type
International, Report
Drug Type
Substances (not alcohol/tobacco)
Intervention Type
Crime prevention
Date
March 2023
Pages
19 p.
Publisher
Australian Institute of Criminology
Place of Publication
Canberra
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