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Former cricketer Stuart MacGill guilty over cocaine deal but acquitted of major drug supply | Former cricketer Stuart MacGill guilty over cocaine deal but acquitted of major drug supply |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Sydney court finds leg-spinner arranged meeting between dealer and brother-in-law but jury dismissed he knew quantity | Sydney court finds leg-spinner arranged meeting between dealer and brother-in-law but jury dismissed he knew quantity |
Former Australian Test cricket star Stuart MacGill might still be jailed, but he has been spared a potential life sentence over his role in a $330,000 cocaine deal that led to his violent kidnapping. | |
The former legspinner, whose post-cricket life has been marred by regular cocaine use, was acquitted on Thursday of taking part in a large commercial drug supply that began under his restaurant in April 2021. | |
But the Sydney district court jury returned a unanimous guilty verdict to a lesser charge of drug supply. | |
They found MacGill knew the cocaine deal between his regular dealer and his brother-in-law was taking place but was oblivious a one-kilogram brick was changing hands. | |
MacGill, 54, showed little emotion as the verdicts were read. | |
The man whose 44-Test career came in the shadow of cricketing great Shane Warne remained tight-lipped as he left court surrounded by cameras and reporters. | |
The jury heard the illicit exchange of $330,000 for a kilogram of cocaine was struck between a dealer known as Person A and Marino Sotiropoulos, the brother of MacGill’s partner. | |
The jury heard the ex-cricketer was a regular user of cocaine and bought the drug from Person A for years, usually in half-gram quantities for $200. | |
He was a trusted buyer, allowed to rack up $1,000 in drug debts and receiving expensive bottles of alcohol for his patronage, the jury heard. | |
While an initial deal went off without a hitch, Person A decided to rip Sotiropoulos’s associates off days later, fleeing with cocaine worth $660,000, crown prosecutor Gabrielle Steedman told the jury. | |
The dealer exchanged the drugs for a vacuum-sealed bag of A4 paper concealed by $50 notes, before turning off his phone and deleting the encrypted app he was using. | |
Threats started to come in demanding the location of Person A or the return of the money, leading to MacGill’s kidnapping later in April. | |
The former Test bowler was bundled into the back of a car by several males and taken to an abandoned shed at Bringelly, in Sydney’s west, where he was assaulted, threatened and released, the jury heard. | |
Six days later he went to police and denied involvement in the drug supply, Ms Steedman said, although he admitted introducing Person A to Sotiropoulos. | |
While the cricketer denied knowing the one-kilogram deal was to take place, Ms Steedman argued the deal could not have occurred without the prior involvement of MacGill, who she attacked as not an impressive witness. | |
MacGill had allegedly complained about the quality of the cocaine Person A was selling him and said his brother-in-law could get him “good gear” in a large quantity. | |
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She also pointed to the dealer’s assertions MacGill was in the car park under the Sydney restaurant until the dealer and Sotiropoulos drove off in one car. | |
The exchange took place in the car as it drove across town. | |
MacGill was arrested in 2023. | |
Defence barrister Thos Hodgson attacked Person A as prone to dishonesty and motivated to get a lower sentence for his own drug supply conviction by implicating MacGill. | |
MacGill’s prior sharing of his dealer’s number with other users - which the Crown claimed showed a tendency to get involved in a larger deal - was also dismissed. | |
“It would not be unusual for people who consume cocaine together ... to say ‘where do you get your cocaine?’” Mr Hodgson said in his closing address. | |
MacGill, who retired in 2008 after claiming 208 Test scalps at an average of 29.02, remains on bail until a sentence hearing on May 9. | |
He has flagged he will seek legal costs. |