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Olympic field hockey player Tom Craig, 28, was arrested for buying cocaine in Paris, according to Reuters. Craig was part of the Olympic team that won silver in Tokyo. The team lost in the quarterfinals Sunday. I made a terrible mistake. I take full responsibility for my actions,' Craig said as he left police offices, according to Reuters. I've embarrassed you all. I'm truly sorry,' he added. The Paris Public Prosecutor's Office told 9News Australia an unidentified member of the men's field hockey team was involved in an alleged 'cocaine transaction at the foot of a building in the city's 9th arrondissement' Tuesday. Police officers witnessed the incident, according to the 9News report. French media outlets first reported news of the detainment, according to Reuters and the Associated Press. Australian field hockey player arrested trying to buy cocaine. Show Caption. Hide Caption. Australian hockey player apologizes following cocaine arrest. Australian hockey player Tom Craig has apologized after he was released from custody following his arrest for allegedly buying cocaine in Paris. Facebook Twitter Email. Share your feedback to help improve our site!
Coke arrest at Paris 2024 Olympic Games forces apology from athlete
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Grace Robinson and James Densley do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. The centre aims to measure the threat of county lines, focus resources on the most serious offenders and work closely with partners in health, welfare and education to reduce the harms associated with the practice. For our latest research , published in the International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, we spoke with members of organised crime groups, police, staff on youth offending teams and young people aged between 14 and 17 involved in drugs gangs in Glasgow, Scotland and Merseyside, England, to find out what leads them to get involved in this practice, and how it affects their lives. Before gangs started using the county lines model, class A drugs such as heroin and crack cocaine were typically supplied in remote areas by user-dealers who would sell to locals from their own supply. Competition in these areas was low, and violence was kept to a minimum. Read more: Not all drug dealers are the same — it's time to ditch outdated stereotypes. But in recent years, gangs have been using experience gained in the big cities to enter into smaller, satellite areas with high demand, good profit margins and low police presence. They are leveraging violent reputations earned in the big cities to intimidate and dominate existing players in the illegal drugs market. Police in picturesque county towns such as Shrewsbury a town of about 70, people close to the Welsh border in Western England are now dealing with turf wars and homicides. During our research, we found that one of the root causes of this problem is how normal it is among teenagers to use cannabis — and the monetary cost of this. Young people in our study began smoking weed recreationally with their friends as young as Perhaps more significant than the psychological and physical effects of cannabis use, which are heightened around the time of puberty , was the fact that weed cost money that these adolescents did not have. The majority of county lines workers we interviewed in Merseyside owed money to a drug dealer. When they failed to pay, the indebted were forced into working for their dealers. Working the lines meant being deployed anywhere at any time, answering the phone without delay when their masters or clients called, and leaving their post only to meet paying customers. Some of our interviewees in Glasgow entered the trade by their own volition. They were willing to travel and simply asked known drug dealers for a job. Owing to boredom, poverty and a sense of hopelessness about their legitimate job prospects, these young people felt they had no choice but to sell drugs. Our findings expose a paradox at the heart of county lines — the exploited and the exploiters are often one and the same. Drug dealers, drug runners and drug users form a hierarchical structure, with the most vulnerable — the users — at the bottom. Drug runners look down on drug addicts to make themselves feel better about their own station. County lines expose that drug prohibition is not working: current laws neither effectively prevent young people from selling drugs, nor protect the most vulnerable in society from consuming them. Positive initiatives such as the National County Lines Coordination Centre are necessary for sharing intelligence between police and social service providers, but constrained by the folly of existing drug policy. Our research highlights that a criminal justice approach based on tough enforcement and recovering the proceeds of crime is not enough to dissuade dealers from dealing. Unless we tackle demand for illicit drugs, and the root causes of gang culture — namely social and economic marginalisation — county lines will continue to be drawn. Edition: Available editions Europe. Become an author Sign up as a reader Sign in. Events More events.
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