
Undercover cops dressed as tradies raid Double Bay Mansion, seize fake cocaine, encrypted phones, steroids in $30M drug sting
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The Australian Federal Police AFP ) on Friday(June 20) stormed a multimillion-dollar mansion in the harbourside suburb of Double Bay, arresting a 40-year-old man allegedly linked to a $30 million cocaine importation attempt.Jonathan Lindsay Fagan, the man at the centre of the investigation, was captured on video being led away by undercover officers dressed as tradies, a strategy used to blend in with the upscale street's constant hum of renovations and gardening crews.Neighbours described the scene as surreal. 'A series of really loud bashing and crashing sounds started echoing,' said one resident, who had been working from home when unmarked vehicles swarmed the street. 'Suddenly, guys in fluro vests and cargo pants were pulling out radios and weapons. It was full-on.'Fagan, wearing a grey tracksuit with a medical paper gown draped over, was handcuffed outside the home on Holt Street. Officers also raided a nearby unit linked to the investigation.According to the AFP, Fagan was the alleged intended recipient of 30 kilograms of cocaine, intercepted overseas before arrival and replaced with a harmless substance. The arrest followed a carefully orchestrated operation: police say Fagan retrieved the substituted cocaine from a 'dead drop' inside a van parked in Alexandria and returned to his Double Bay address, unaware of the trap.Shortly after, officers made their move, recovering the substituted cocaine, encrypted mobile phones, and a quantity of anabolic steroids during the raid.Authorities estimate the cocaine had a potential street value of $9.7 million, equating to around 150,000 street-level deals.Little is publicly known about Fagan. The home raided is believed to belong to his elderly parents, and neighbours say the house had long been seen as quiet, occasionally hosting 'low-key family gatherings.' Police say his parents are not suspected of involvement.Fagan appeared in Parramatta Local Court on Saturday(June 21). Bail was denied, and he will remain in custody until his next hearing on Tuesday, June 24. He faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment if convicted under Australian drug importation laws.The AFP confirmed this takedown is part of a broader campaign targeting transnational drug syndicates increasingly turning to 'dead drop' methods to reduce traceability. These hidden exchanges often carried out in public areas like parking lots, make surveillance and infiltration critical to enforcement efforts.'This arrest sends a powerful message,' an AFP spokesperson said. 'No matter the disguise, we will find you.'
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