Tag Archives: oceania

US Army investigating Kid Rock helicopter stunt

The US Army is investigating after a helicopter was filmed performing a low-altitude manoeuvre outside the home of musician Kid Rock while he saluted.

The singer posted a video of the Apache attack helicopter hovering above his Nashville home while he saluted.

"This is a level of respect that s— for brains Governor of California will never know," he captioned the video on Instagram.

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Kid Rock in the Oval Office with Donald Trump.

"God Bless America and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend her."

Now the US Army has ordered an investigation as to why the Apache was flying so close to the singer's house.

"Fort Campbell leadership is aware of a video circulating on social media depicting AH-64 Apache helicopters operating in the vicinity of a private residence associated with Mr. Robert Ritchie (also known as 'Kid Rock')," a statement read.

"The command has initiated an investigation to review the circumstances surrounding this activity."

Kid Rock's Nashville home is styled after the White House.

The singer has become one of the few celebrities to still associate himself with Donald Trump.

An early progenitor of the country-rap genre, Kid Rock was particularly successful in the United States. Several of his albums also made the charts in Australia.

The Army is also being asked about why military helicopters flew low over a crowd of anti-Trump protesters that same day.

READ MORE: $800m in trades before Trump announcement 'is treason'

An Apache helicopter flies about the Nashville No Kings protest.

The No Kings crowd in Nashville was buzzed by two Apaches. It is not apparent if it is the same helicopter in Kid Rock's video.

"Our pilots do regularly fly routes outside the Fort Campbell area," the Army spokesperson said.

"We just don't know if it was incidental or if it was deliberate."

Thousands of people took to the streets for the protest in Nashville, one of countless rallies across the US.

Organisers said at least eight million people took place in the demonstrations, largely protesting the Trump presidency.

READ MORE: Trump on shaky ground after Democrats win Mar-a-Lago seat

Thousands took to the streets in Nashville for the No Kings protest.



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Dezi Freeman ‘clearly’ had help on the run, ex-detective says

A former detective says wanted fugitive Dezi Freeman "clearly" received help in his months on the run before he was killed by police gunfire at a remote Victorian property yesterday.

Freeman, 56, had not been seen in public since two police officers were killed in a shooting ambush on his property in Porepunkah, Victoria, on August 26 last year.

In the seven months since, police received thousands of pieces of information, before a final tip led them to a property at Thologolong, about 150km by road from Porepunkah.

READ MORE: Inside the police operation that killed Dezi Freeman

LIVE UPDATES: Trump threatens to wipe out critical Iranian island if deal isn't reached 'shortly'

A police "bearcat" with a tool that punched through the shell of a shipping container Freeman was inside.A makeshift awning and some chairs can be seen outside the shipping container Dezi Freeman was hiding inside.

Freeman, who was living in a shipping container on the property, refused to surrender to officers and was killed after he emerged from the container while armed with a gun and wrapped in a blanket.

Police are working to determine whether he was in possession of the gun used to kill Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson, 59, and Senior Constable Vadim De Waart-Hottart, 35, at Porepunkah.

Former Victoria Police detective Charlie Bezzina said police would have acted cautiously on the information that led them to the property, including surveilling it for more than a day to confirm Freeman was there.

He said the operation would have been a difficult one, given the openness of the property in particular.

"The only advantage (police) had, there were no other people that could be put in danger," Bezzina told Today.

"Ultimately, he's got nothing to lose."

FUEL CRISIS: When will fuel prices in Australia go down?

Police on the scene at a property near Thologolong where accused Police killer Desmond Freeman was shot dead by police this morning after a stand-off.

Bezzina said while Freeman, a self-declared "sovereign citizen", may not have needed much help, it's likely he would have received some while on the run.

"He had a head start before the actual SOG (Special Operations Group) got there," he said.

"I've learned since then, there are other sovereign citizens actually in Porepunkah that would have been sympathetic to his cause."

Bezzina suggested Freeman could have approached somebody for assistance, particularly given the distance and terrain between Porepunkah and Thologolong.

"He'd have to be assisted because he's getting food and nourishment and water to that location," he said.

"He couldn't walk into town, because country people know you're a stranger, and ultimately, he couldn't afford it."

There is no suggestion any particular person, nor anybody linked to the property where Freeman was found, offered assistance to the fugitive.

Yesterday, Victoria Police Commissioner Mike Bush said he was "sure" Freeman had received help.

"It would be very difficult for him to get to where he was, if that is in fact him, without assistance," he said.

"We will be speaking to anybody who we suspect may have assisted him to avoid detection or arrest."

He pledged to bring charges against anybody complicit in Freeman's flight.

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When will fuel prices in Australia go down?

Australians are set to see some much-needed relief at the petrol pump after Anthony Albanese announced the reduction of a key fuel tax for three months.

The fuel excise, a tax on petrol, will be halved, seeing petrol prices finally go down after soaring for weeks due to the supply issues arising from the Middle East conflict.

These changes and others will take effect soon, with Australians now having more certainty as to when they will pay less at the bowser.

LIVE UPDATES: Trump threatens to wipe out critical Iranian island if deal isn't reached 'shortly'

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 27 March 2026. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

When will petrol prices go down?

The fuel excise cut will go into effect tomorrow on April 1.

Given it will be signed into law, it means it will have an instant impact on the cost of fuel, with Albanese claiming it would reduce the cost of petrol by 26.3 cents per litre.

But – stations will have to first sell the batch of fuel they had paid for at the full rate of fuel excise.

So on April 1 the changes may not be immediate, unless you are filling up at a station that has a high turnover of fuel, and a new batch taxed at the half rate has already been bought and filled.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers elaborated and said filling up a 65l tank with petrol would be $19 cheaper once the changes happen.

According to the latest figures released by the Australian Institute of Petroleum, unleaded petrol costs around $2.53 a litre, with diesel well over $3 a litre, which is why farmers and heavy transport industries are being hit particularly hard.

A further measure of relief is the temporary halt of the heavy road vehicle user charge, which hits truckies with a 32.6 cents per litre charge on diesel.

This will also be in place for three months.

READ MORE: Why thousands of Aussies plan to cancel their health insurance tomorrow

Women filling up at petrol station

Why is petrol so expensive right now?

Longer term, the price of oil will continue to keep petrol prices high, and that is something out of the governments control.

Crude oil currently costs around $115 a barrel; it was sitting in and around the $65 region before the Middle East conflict broke out and impacted the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping lane in the region for worldwide oil trade.

Not only is oil more expensive, the volatile situation in the Middle East means it is harder for oil to get to Australia, even though the government insists supply isn't a longer-term issue at the moment.

With increased demand, more people are rushing to fill up – some even hoarding petrol – which is leading to shortages and more pain at the pump for Australians in the cities and in the rural areas.

READ MORE: Why NSW government has decided not to offer free public transport for commuters amid fuel crisis

Are petrol stations running out of fuel?

Hundreds of petrol stations across Australia have reported running out of petrol or diesel at different points in the last two weeks.

It is difficult to ascertain the true levels, though states and territories often release daily figures of how many petrol stations are out of fuel.

Some petrol stations run out of both petrol and diesel, though some only run out of one or the other.

For example in New South Wales last weekend, 66 petrol stations were out of fuel.

However, Transport Minister John Graham said some regional areas that were low on fuel previously had been resupplied.

READ MORE: The timeline of events from Porepunkah shooting to cop-killer's death

Petrol bowsers across NSW have begun running out of fuel.

How long will these petrol prices last?

As mentioned before, the only way we will see prolonged relief at the pump will be when the price of oil drops.

That almost exclusively hinges on the fate of the Middle East conflict, which shows no signs of slowing anytime soon.

NSW Premier Chris Minns cautioned his state to prepare for long-term disruption as a result of the war.

"I am not seeing any indication that this will be resolved in 30 days," Minns said.

"I don't know whether it is going to be over in a week, or whether it's going to be a prolonged situation… but we have got to prepare for every eventuality."

How many days of petrol does Australia have left?

Energy Minister Chris Bowen insisted Australia still has a month of supply of petrol, and said shipments are still coming in despite some cancellations.

Briefing parliament yesterday, he said the country has nine days' worth of petrol, 30 days' worth of diesel; and 30 days' worth of jet fuel.

Bowen said any shipments that were cancelled have been more than properly replaced, as he looks to ease fears of a drop in supply.

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Charges dropped against Brisbane teen after woman run over in alleged home invasion

A Brisbane woman who was run over by her own car as it was allegedly stolen by a group of teens has told of her disappointment after charges were dropped against one of them due to a lack of evidence.

Emma Trillo and her partner were woken by a disturbance at their home in Ascot about 4.30am on September 10 last year, before Trillo was run down by her own black BMW and left with a fractured hip, pelvis and spine.

Leo Angelo Matar, 18, has today had all charges against him relating to the alleged confrontation dropped.

AS IT HAPPENED: 'Evil man' Dezi Freeman was 'armed, wrapped in blanket' when shot

Emma Trillo is still suffering from long-term injuries.

At a previous bail hearing, the court heard the prosecution's case heavily relied on a thumbnail-sized photo that allegedly showed Matar with two teens taken on the day of the alleged crimes.

Those two 16-year-olds are still facing charges over the incident.

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"The system has really let us down in this scenario," Trillo said.

"My bones have healed, but soft tissue injuries are still in play. I'm still seeing physio.

READ MORE: 'That's still my father': Cop killer's son slams 'disgusting' comments

The incident happened in Ascot Vale in Brisbane.

"Still to this day, we have trouble sleeping of an evening."

Matar's father David Sandford, said the family was relieved.

"We just want to get him recovered. We just wanna get him back on the track," he said.

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Families of officers Dezi Freeman allegedly killed finally have answers

The families of two police officers allegedly shot dead by Dezi Freeman last year finally have answers after the fugitive managed to evade police for seven months.

Freeman allegedly killed the officers "in cold blood" in Porepunkah, Victoria last August.

He then fled into bushland, kicking off a manhunt that gripped the nation – and ended this morning.

LIVE UPDAYES: Dezi Freeman shot dead after seven months on the run

Art for the Nine.com.au homepage of Dezi Freeman, who was reportedly shot dead in Victoria's north-east.

Freeman was reportedly hiding in a shipping container on a property in Thologolong when he was shot dead by heavily-armed police today.

His death brings the manhunt to an end, but the story of the Porepunkah shooting and the lives it changed forever isn't over yet.

Especially not for the families of Detective Leading Senior Constable Neal Thompson and Senior Constable Vadim De Waart-Hottart

"It doesn't lessen the trauma, give back the futures that were callously stolen or lessen the collective fear and grief that this tragic event has instilled in police and the wider public," a Police Association Victoria spokesperson said.

The families of Thompson and De Waart-Hottart were the first to be notified that Freeman had reportedly been shot dead by police this morning.

LIVE UPDATES: All eyes on National Cabinet to solve fuel crisis

Porepunkah shooting victims Vadim de Waart and Neal Thompson

Freeman had several run-ins with police before that deadly day.

A self-declared "sovereign citizen", Freeman referred to police in court as "frigging Nazis", "Gestapo" and "terrorist thugs", a court judgement shows.

On other occasions he tried to place a magistrate and several police officers "under arrest" in court.

Nothing could have prepared police for what unfolded on the morning of August 26.

Officers arrived at the Rayner Track property where Freeman was living to execute a search warrant on behalf of the Wangaratta Sexual Offences and Child Abuse Investigation Team.

Freeman allegedly opened fire on the officers, killing Thompson and Waart-Hottart, and injuring a third officer.

READ MORE: Fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman shot dead by police after seven months on the run

An accused gunman on the run after two police officers were fatally shot and another was wounded as been identified as Dezi Freeman.

Police returned fire but Freeman was able to escape on foot and was seen fleeing into the bush.

So began a manhunt for the alleged cop-killer, who managed to evade hundreds of police, specialist officers, volunteers and dogs for months.

Tensions were high the immediate aftermath of the shooting.

The remote town of Porepunkah was thrown into lockdown, with police urging locals to stay inside and warning outsiders to stay away.

Roadblocks were set up on the edge of town and police worked through the night in the hopes of capturing Freeman, who was believed to be armed.

READ MORE: Why NSW government has decided not to offer free public transport for commuters amid fuel crisis

Porepunkah map

Freeman's partner, Amalia, and children presented themselves to local police for questioning. Amalia was later arrested.

But as the days dragged on, bringing brutal weather to the region, there was still no sight of Freeman.

Days turned into weeks. Weeks became months.

In September, Victoria Police announced a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to Freeman's arrest.

But as the New Year rolled in, he remained at large.

Updates were few and far between.

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Manhunt for Dezi Freeman

Despite multiple searches of Victorian bushland and properties and questioning Freeman's friends and family, police seemed no closer to locating the alleged killer.

"We are currently exploring three scenarios: the first is that Freeman is dead, either by self-harm or misadventure," Victoria Police Detective Inspector Adam Tilley said in February.

"The second [theory] is he has been able to escape the area and is being harboured by a person or people.

"And a third scenario we are exploring is that he has left the area and is on the run unassisted and he has not been located."

The following month, police confirmed charges would not be laid against Freeman's wife and two other people who were probed over the deadly Porepunkah shooting.

READ MORE: Federal government to avoid 'harsher measures and restrictions' ahead of national cabinet meeting to address Australia's fuel crisis

Dezi Freeman interviewed for A Current Affair (Nine)

Little did the rest of Australia know, Freeman was very much alive.

He was reportedly hiding out in a makeshift caravan-cross-shipping container on a rural property in Thologolong, located in Victoria's north east.

That's where police found and attempted to negotiate with the fugitive, sparking a three-hour standoff this morning.

Freeman emerged from the caravan bunker wrapped in a blanket and armed with a gun he had stolen from one of the slain police officers, 9News understands.

It is believed he opened fire at officers.

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The Thologolong property where Dezi Freeman was reportedly shot dead.

Police believe multiple officers opened fire at Freeman, who was fatally shot.

News of his death sent shockwaves around the country, making headlines on every news site in the nation.

It's unclear how long Freeman had been hiding in the shipping container, and how police finally found him after so many months.

Those details will emerge in time.

Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Mike Bush said in a press conference that it's likely other individuals aided Freeman in evading police for so long.

READ MORE: Police search for driver after Melbourne father badly hurt in hit-and-run

Victoria police on Freeman shooting

"I am sure some assisted him in getting away from Porepunkah to where he is located," Bush said.

He added that anyone "complicit" in Freeman's hiding would face charges.

Bush also suggested that the public may never know if anyone collects the $1 million reward for information leading to Freeman's arrest.

"Anything in relation to any reward or anything else about the investigation will be kept confidential," he said.

He said today's shooting was "justified" and the conclusion of the police operation will give closure to those affected by the Porepunkah shooting.

READ MORE: How many days does Australia have left of fuel?

Police reportedly used a bearcat to ram the shipping container where Freeman was located.

But for the police officers and families devastated by Freeman's actions on August 26, this moment – though it has been a long time coming – is not the end.

"Closure isn't the right word," a Police Association Victoria spokesperson said earlier today.

"This represents a step forward for our members, for the families of our fallen members and for the community."

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‘That’s still my father’: Cop killer’s son slams ‘disgusting’ comments

Dezi Freeman's eldest son has condemned celebrations of the cop killer's death this morning.

In a post to a local Facebook group, a man claiming to be Dezi's eldest son Koah hit out at "disgusting humans" celebrating the fugitive's death online.

"This is news that I'll be grieving about while some of you disgusting humans celebrate online for ME to watch," he wrote.

LIVE UPDATES: Dezi Freeman shot dead after seven months on the run

An aerial image of the Walwa property where Dezi Freeman was reportedly located this morning.

"Before you have something smart to say, how about you try and experience 1 per cent of what me and my family are going through?"

"If you can't then I highly recommend keeping your nasty comments and thoughts to yourself."

Koah clarified he was "not here to defend my father's action because I know what he did was wrong".

"What I'm here about however is seeing so called "friends" and people who I thought were nice people to say some questionable things," he wrote.

"Just bear in mind that to you's my father was a cop killer, but to me that's still my father who raised me to be the man I am today.

READ MORE: How many days does Australia have left of fuel?

Koah Freeman's Facebook post regarding his father Dezi Freeman's shooting death.

"And for the people who know me well they know exactly what I'm talking about.

"My heart also goes out to the family's of the fallen police officer who finally have closure," he added.

Dezi Freeman was reportedly shot dead on a rural property near Walwa, on the north-east Victorian border this morning after seven months on the run.

Victoria Police confirmed a man was fatally shot at a rural address in Walwa, north-east of Porepunkah and on the border with NSW, just before 8.30am.

Victoria Police Commissioner Mike Bush would not name the man shot dead, pending official identification processes, but said he was believed to be Freeman.

He is accused of murdering Victorian police officers Neal Thompson, 59, and Vadim De Waart-Hottart, 35 and seriously injuring a third at a Porepunkah property on August 26.

Earlier this month police announced three people, including Dezi's wife and Koah's mum, Mali Freeman, would not be charged in relation into the investigation, after they were interviewed regarding obstruction of police.

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Police likely believed Dezi Freeman was dead before tip-off, former police negotiator says

Police likely believed cop killer Dezi Freeman was dead before they were led to a rural Victorian property where they engaged in a deadly standoff with the fugitive this morning, a former police negotiator says.

Freeman was shot dead on a remote Thologolong property, near the Victoria-NSW border, around 8.30am after three hours of negotiations, Victoria Police said today.

Police were reportedly tipped-off to his whereabouts by an associate.

READ MORE: Fugitive gunman Dezi Freeman shot dead by police after seven months on the run

Thologolong property where Dezi Freeman was killed.

Last month, police led a thorough five-day search for Freeman's body in dense bushland across dense bushland in Mt Buffalo National Park based on the "strong" belief the cop killer was deceased.

Rumours have since swirled that Victoria Police may have announced their search for Freeman's body as a tactic to make him believe their trail had run cold.

But former police negotiator and Macquarie University Criminology lecturer Dr Vincent Hurley believes police would not risk undermining public confidence in the investigation.

"They would not have said that if they did not believe at the time that that was a likely outcome," Hurley said.

"Regardless of whether they are police victims or not, when two people have been murdered and police from literally every state in territory in Australia has gone down to assist, they're not going to come out and say something that they don't think at the time is true.

"If it was said intentionally incorrectly, then what message does that send to the public about the police wanting further assistance in the future about any crime?

"In my 30 years in the police force and 22 years has a detective… you would never do that because of the consequences of it is just catastrophic."

READ MORE: 'That's still my father': Dezi Freeman's son slams 'disgusting' comments celebrating cop killer's death

Dezi Freeman search

Freeman may have been surveilled for a week before shooting

Police may have been watching Dezi Freeman for as long as one week before an hours-long standoff led to his shooting death this morning, Hurley believes.

"They would want to know if anyone was helping him and they'd want to know his daily routine," Hurley revealed.

"They would not have gone in at the first sight of him, at all. It would pose too many unacceptable risks.

"It could even be that the police had modelled or done scenarios based on them finding him, not necessarily in a container, but in a house or something like that."

Thologolong property where Dezi Freeman was killed.

Bush revealed Freeman was armed and wrapped in a blanket when he "exited" a shipping container on a rural Thologolong property earlier this morning, hours after police descended on the acreage around 5.30am.

Hurley believes police would have tried to reason with the so-called sovereign citizen to apprehend him alive.

"They would've surrounded [the shipping container] and the negotiator would've said to him that 'you are surrounded, there's no chance of you escaping, we've got a cordon around the area'," Hurley said.

"Then they would've given him the options and they would've tried to negotiate some type of reason with him to give up without a fight, for example.

"Ultimately, they want to get him before the court.

"They want to get him before the court to answer to the crimes, regardless of who the victims are, so it would never have been a case of retribution. Never."

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Criminologist Doctor Vincent Hurley

"They would have told him clearly that he was surrounded, that the options are come out, we're not gonna hurt you, we want to get you before the courts. All the usual things to reassure him.

"But given his ideology as a sovereign citizen, he would have a somewhat distorted view of what he thought would be the appropriate outcome.

Less than three weeks ago police informed the public they would not press charges against Freeman's wife Mali and two others after they were interviewed for obstruction of police.

That too was a coincidental development in the timeline of events that led to Freeman's death.

"I don't think, in my view, that they would've had him under surveillance for that long," Hurley said when asked whether police could have outlawed charges in a bid to appeal to Freeman.

"We'll never know, but I speculate it would be more coincidental than anything else."

Fears fugitive may act as example to others

Police are yet to confirm any sightings of Freeman since the Tuesday ambush.

The self-described sovereign citizen's death has come as a relief to many, but Hurley fears his ability to evade capture for more than seven months may spur on others who subscribe to dangerous ideologies.

"The fact that he survived seven months or six months by himself, other people like-minded to the sovereign citizen or preppers purpose, they'll be preparing now for longer than seven months," Hurley said.

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Three men fighting for life after stabbing in Western Sydney fight

Three men are fighting for life after a stabbing in Western Sydney.

Police said the trio, aged 30, 37, and 56, were involved in an altercation just before 3.30pm in Girraween.

The 30-year-old and 56-year-old suffered several stab wounds to their torso, while the 37-year-old man suffered injuries to his arms.

AS IT HAPPENED: Details of fugitive Dezi's Freeman's final hours revealed

The men are believed to be known to each other.

All of the men are believed to be known to each other.

Paramedics treated all three men before they were taken to hospital in a critical condition.

A crime scene has been established, with police investigating the fight.

Anyone who witnessed it or has footage is urged to contact police.

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Six charged with trying to import tonne of cocaine on boat

Six men from Central and South America are facing the potential of life in prison for allegedly planning to import a tonne of cocaine into Australia on a boat that was stopped in French Polynesia.

Police allege the boat, called the MV Raider, was modified so that it had three separate hiding places for drugs and other illegal goods specially built in to evade detection from authorities while at sea.

"It was custom-made purely for the importation of illicit commodities," Commander Brett James of the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said of the boat.

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Police uncover one of the hiding places on the ship.

"They were very sophisticated and designed to avoid law enforcement detection."

Authorities in French Polynesia allegedly stopped the 40-metre boat, which had set off from Central America, in January and removed 4.8 tonnes of cocaine.

It is alleged the boat was planning to travel to Australia and rendezvous with an Australia-based crew off the coast of NSW.

However, police intercepted the MV Raider about 180 nautical miles off the coast late last month, where the crew was told they would not be granted entry into Australia.

LIVE UPDATES: Dezi Freeman was 'armed, wrapped in blanket' when shot

The MV Raider is towed into Sydney Harbour after making a distress call.

On March 12, the ship's crew placed a distress call claiming it had mechanical issues and was low on food and water.

It was escorted the next day into Sydney Harbour, where Australian Federal Police raided the boat, while border force officers detained the men as unlawful arrivals and took them to Villawood Detention Centre.

It was during the search that police found the specially built holds, which are suspected to have previously held about six tonnes of cocaine.

While cocaine wasn't found on the ship, police seized a number of items, including electronic devices, that they claim prove the group was attempting to import a tonne of cocaine into Australia.

READ MORE: Police likely believed Dezi Freeman was dead before tip-off, former police negotiator says

Police believe the hiding places were specifically built to smuggle drugs.

Last weekend, police arrested and charged six crew members, five from Honduras and one from Ecuador, with conspiracy to import a commercial quantity of border-controlled drugs.

This carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if the men are found guilty.

The men faced court today, where they didn't apply for bail.

The ship has been moored in Birchgrove since its arrival into Sydney, but will now be seized by the AFP.

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