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  1. #31
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Quote Originally Posted by FrediKanoute View Post
    I was in the Brisbane Magistrates court in 2001 because my housemate was up on a DD charge. The case before was a guy who had been busted with a sizeable quantity of marijuana, neatly packed into little ounce bags in his car. He pleaded that he was a really organised person and that the gear was for personal consumption. The Magistrate agreed - non-custodial sentence.
    That's very funny.
    How famous people think their drug problems will remain secret is beyond me.
    The massive bags under his eyes were always a bit of a give away.
    You don't develop courage by being happy in your relationships every day. You develop it by surviving difficult times and challenging adversity. ― Epicurus

  2. #32
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    I was surprised to hear an acquaitance say today that he wasn't at all surprised to hear of Bomber's travails. High profile people seem to think they are invisible for some reason.
    http://journals.worldnomads.com/merantau
    "It's not about the destination - it's about the trip."

  3. #33
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    My boss also knew about it. He runs with a footy circle and told me about it a couple of years ago. Very sad as I am one of the few it seems, that liked Bomber. Met him about 18 months ago and he was happy to talk all things Bulldogs in the short time we had.
    I bleed Red,White & Blue

  4. #34
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Quote Originally Posted by Axe Man View Post
    One of the guys arrested by the police had a parking ticket in his car received out the front of Thompson's Port Melbourne property which led them there.
    Hmmm.

    Dig a little deeper.
    What should I tell her? She's going to ask.

  5. #35
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    I think that everyone suspected Bomber of being on something, but I'd always assumed that it was cocaine, A kilo of MDMA is a big deal and the electronic scales is basically everything the prosecution needed to slap him with trafficking.

  6. #36
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    www.bulldogtragician.com A blog about being a lifelong fan of the Dogs and our quixotic attempt to replicate 1954. AND WE DID
    Author of "The Mighty West: the Bulldogs journey from daydream believers to premiership heroes"
    Twitter @bulldogstragic

  7. #37
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Good article by Martin Blake on Bomber - here
    FFC: Established 1883

    Premierships: AFL 1954, 2016 VFA - 1898,99,1900, 1908, 1913, 1919-20, 1923-24, VFL: 2014, 2016 . Champions of Victoria 1924. AFLW - 2018.

  8. #38
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    It sounds like Thompson’s alleged drug use (which has possibly stretched back to at least his coaching days at the Cats) is one of the worst kept secrets in footy. Certainly when the initial drama went down a few months ago (with the arrest of his houseguest) enough people expressed concern and alluded to having had those concerns for a good while.

    If so, it makes all of these close associates that are coming out all shocked and worried look a little like the enablers that sat back, turned a blind eye, and let Ben Cousins go speeding down the rabbit hole to self destruction. They should hang their heads in shame. Sure there may be a few that genuinely didn’t know, but I call BS on the majority of them.

    Also, as much as I have sympathy and feel sorry for him if he has found himself in a dark place with addiction, mental health issues etc. I would not maintain my level of sympathy if he was indeed dealing. This is a bloke that made more money than he could probably know what to do with through a bumper property deal, it’s not like he had to sell to support any potential habits.

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  10. #39
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    When these types of stories arise I wonder how readily those supporting Bomber the Champ Thompson would support your average garden variety, low socio-economic and low profile person set to face the same charges (as is normally the case).

    Cases like these really do show us how hypocritical we can be as a society, and the double standards and privilege that pervades our discourse when they receive some profile.
    Nobody's looking for a puppeteer in today's wintry economic climate.

  11. #40
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Quote Originally Posted by The Adelaide Connection View Post
    It sounds like Thompson’s alleged drug use (which has possibly stretched back to at least his coaching days at the Cats) is one of the worst kept secrets in footy. Certainly when the initial drama went down a few months ago (with the arrest of his houseguest) enough people expressed concern and alluded to having had those concerns for a good while.

    If so, it makes all of these close associates that are coming out all shocked and worried look a little like the enablers that sat back, turned a blind eye, and let Ben Cousins go speeding down the rabbit hole to self destruction. They should hang their heads in shame. Sure there may be a few that genuinely didn’t know, but I call BS on the majority of them.

    Also, as much as I have sympathy and feel sorry for him if he has found himself in a dark place with addiction, mental health issues etc. I would not maintain my level of sympathy if he was indeed dealing. This is a bloke that made more money than he could probably know what to do with through a bumper property deal, it’s not like he had to sell to support any potential habits.
    On top of the "shocked enablers" there would be a litany of folks in the industry thinking "what's happened to Bomber won't happen to me"......and they'd all be keeping extremely quiet right now.
    Nobody's looking for a puppeteer in today's wintry economic climate.

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  13. #41
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    From the Australian

    THE AUSTRALIAN ›

    The sad ‘breaking bad’ of Bomber Thompson, the footballing virtuoso

    CHIP LE GRAND MAY 02, 2018

    From his place high in the stands, behind the glass of the coaches’ box, Thompson could distil from the mayhem below the critical move that needed to be made, the message that needed to be sent, the lever that needed to be pulled to swing a contest, a match, a season. For those two hours each week, he was a virtuoso, a man with a rare sporting gift.

    It was outside the coaches’ box, away from the stadium lights, that Thompson’s life spiralled out of control.

    What remains of that life is now finely balanced. Having captained Essendon to a premiership and coached Geelong to their drought-breaking flag in 2007, having been celebrated and feted and publicly revered, Thompson is facing serious criminal charges of trafficking two drugs of dependence: ecstasy and methylamphetamine, commonly known as ice.

    This time, Thompson can see no way out.

    He is adamant he did not traffic drugs, but has confided in friends that he cannot co-operate with police for fear of reprisals by those to whom he foolishly opened his Port Melbourne home.

    He is what career criminals call a square head: a 54-year-old father of three with no previous criminal convictions who, having dedicated his working life to keeping young footballers fit, strong and motivated, now stands accused of breaking bad.

    It is a dramatic, abject fall from grace. Yet those who know him well are not entirely surprised.

    “Bomber carried off this dual lifestyle,’’ an Essendon figure said. “Everyone thought he was an amazing player, coach at Geelong and great Essendon person. Superficially he probably was but once you drilled down, it was just a mess. Most people didn’t see that.’’

    Such was Thompson’s erratic behaviour in his final year at Essendon in 2014, his last as an AFL coach, that the club kept a discreet log recording episodes ranging from the bizarre to deeply troubling.

    Karl ‘Bang Bang’ Holt. Picture: Mike Dugdale
    Karl ‘Bang Bang’ Holt. Picture: Mike Dugdale
    Detailed in its pages are the time he walked out of the club at 11am, only to be found asleep in his car by a security guard five hours later. The time that, less than an hour before an AFL match he was supposed to coach, his fellow coaches and staff had no idea where he was.

    There are the training sessions missed without explanation. His no-shows at important meetings. The occasions he would arrive late, lathered in sweat, looking as though he hadn’t slept the night before or indeed, for days.

    It is tempting to sheet all of this back to the Essendon drug scandal: a sporting, political and legal wrecking ball that swung through Windy Hill in 2013 and over the next three years, lay the club, its players, staff and lifelong friendships to waste.

    Thompson, by his own reckoning, was consumed by the scandal. He is haunted by the role he played in bringing to the club Dean Robinson, a headstrong conditioning coach who in turn introduced to Essendon the now discredited and bankrupt sports scientist Stephen Dank.

    At the same time, Thompson bristles with injustice at how he was treated by the AFL and, later, by his own club.

    It is simplistic to see Thompson’s personal crisis solely through this prism. Although his behaviour deteriorated after the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority and the AFL launched a joint investigation into suspected doping at Essendon, it didn’t start there. At Essendon, successive management regimes stretching back to 2010, when Thompson was hired from Geelong to mentor newly appointed senior coach James Hird, suspected Thompson of using drugs.

    Thomas Windsor. Picture: Bendigo Advertiser
    Thomas Windsor. Picture: Bendigo Advertiser
    Well before the supplements scandal broke, Essendon staged an intervention. Thompson was called to a meeting in chief executive Ian Robson’s office where he found Robson, club president David Evans, Hird and club doctor Bruce Reid waiting for him. They each expressed concern about his welfare.

    It was left to Reid to ask Thompson the question they all had: whether he was using drugs. Thompson vehemently denied it and consistently has to anyone who has since asked.

    There were also problems at Geelong, where Thompson became the first Cats coach in 44 years to bring a premiership cup to Kardinia Park.

    The year before the premiership, he split from his wife and mother of his three children who were living in Melbourne.

    He moved permanently to Geelong and started a relationship with a much younger woman. He grew distant from old friends and became untethered from his support network.

    In his final years at the club, his players started seeing him at the same nightspots they frequented, at hours when all of them should have been in bed.

    He grew rich from a local property development and started keeping company with a clique of similarly wealthy men who could afford to live fast and loose.

    One of them was said to have kept a permanent address at Crown casino.

    By the time he joined Essendon at the end of the 2010 season, having misled Geelong about his intentions, his arrival was accompanied by worrying tales from a not-so-Sleepy Hollow. Essendon officials noted his short concentration span and his difficulty looking people in the eye. Which brings us to Bang Bang.

    Karl “Bang Bang” Holt is hard to miss. His shaved head is covered with tattoos. His black Mercedes coupe carries the personalised licence plate ONBAIL.

    On January 4 this year, police intercepted Holt and his girlfriend, Katia Drcec, on a stretch of the Princes Highway just outside Geelong. Inside his car, they allegedly found more than 100g of methamphetamine, a crack pipe and $2380 in cash.

    From there, police paid a visit to Drcec’s mother’s house in Mill Park where they found more drugs and cash and a semi-automatic pistol.

    The arrests of Holt and Drcec led police to search for Holt’s well-known business associate, the burly, heavily inked Thomas Windsor. They found him at a property at Lara, where his rented Toyota Corolla was parked on the front lawn. Checks on the car revealed that a parking inspector sighted it two days earlier in the Port Melbourne street where Thompson owns a converted warehouse. Further checks revealed Thompson had paid for Windsor’s car rental.

    On January 5, armed members of the Geelong Divisional Response Unit executed a search warrant on Thompson’s property. Nobody was home but when they forced their way in, police discovered a trafficable quantity of drugs and an array of equipment commonly used by those in the trade to weigh, package and mix their illicit products.

    The largest stash of drugs found at the address was nearly a kilogram of MDMA, otherwise known as the party drug ecstasy. More problematic for Thompson is a series of smaller packets of the same drug, with a combined weight of 134.6g, found in a locked storage room leading off his bedroom.

    According to police, these packets were found to have traces of Thompson’s DNA. Police found them next to Geelong Football Club memorabilia that Thompson had kept since his glory days as a premiership coach.

    Thompson’s home is in a row of warehouses in a narrow street. He has lived there since 2010. Police allege Windsor has also been living there for a while, running a criminal enterprise from the same premises where Essendon used to hold its regular coaches’ meetings.

    When Thompson appeared in Melbourne Magistrates Court on Tuesday to answer the charges against him and apply for bail, police said they had found a handwritten lease agreement between Thompson and Windsor on the kitchen table.

    Police say they also have evidence of an exchange of a large sum of money between the pair.

    Windsor, Holt and Drcec are currently remanded in custody, waiting for committal proceedings on charges of trafficking commercial quantities of drugs. Thompson successfully applied for bail on the condition that he have no contact with his co-accused, surrender his passport and report to police three times a week. His immediate fate will be decided on summary, by a magistrate. Two of the key questions he will be asked to answer is how Windsor came to live at his home and what he knew of his alleged criminal activities.

    If Thompson is to be believed, Windsor is a house guest who simply refused to leave.

    They met, Thompson liked him, and offered him a place to stay.

    Thompson maintains he had no involvement in any drugs Windsor allegedly distributed or sold from his Port Melbourne warehouse, where Windsor had the run of a self-contained flat.

    Thompson’s lawyer, David Hallowes SC, told the bail hearing that the trafficking charges would be “vigorously denied’’.

    Thompson is charged with three such counts. Each one carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

    As news of Thompson’s troubles spread, many old friends reached out to the fallen football hero. One told The Australian that he visited Thompson recently, some weeks after the police raid, and was struck by how healthy and relaxed he seemed.

    Another was planning to meet Thompson last night to offer what help he could.

    They are terribly saddened but not genuinely shocked at where it has ended for Bomber. For many years, he has been watching the game with his eyes half-closed.
    The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride.

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  15. #42
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Gee that article is quite revealing.

  16. #43
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    There are photos on twitter of his head being used as a mascot at rave parties - these date back 2-3 years.

    The Australian article is very illuminating. Despite all the protestations these things don’t come from left field. I don’t think it’s been mentioned but wasn’t there commentary at the time of him putting in a bizarre rambling performance in the final B and F when he left Essendon as a coach
    www.bulldogtragician.com A blog about being a lifelong fan of the Dogs and our quixotic attempt to replicate 1954. AND WE DID
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    Twitter @bulldogstragic

  17. #44
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    Quote Originally Posted by The bulldog tragician View Post
    There are photos on twitter of his head being used as a mascot at rave parties - these date back 2-3 years.

    The Australian article is very illuminating. Despite all the protestations these things don’t come from left field. I don’t think it’s been mentioned but wasn’t there commentary at the time of him putting in a bizarre rambling performance in the final B and F when he left Essendon as a coach
    I first heard Bomber was having drug problems about three years ago.
    They say Burt Lancaster has one, but I don't believe them.

  18. #45
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    Re: Mark Thompson - Serious Drugs Charges

    No doubt Robbo, Loydo and every other o will find a way to blame someone else about it.
    You don't develop courage by being happy in your relationships every day. You develop it by surviving difficult times and challenging adversity. ― Epicurus

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