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TID Board Of Directors
- Aug 11, 2010
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"DO you want to go to jail, Mr Bennett? Because that's where you are headed."
Those were the words of Mackay Magistrate Damien Dwyer after Anthony Matthew Bennett pleaded guilty to possessing dangerous drugs yesterday.
Mr Dwyer warned the 28-year-old Mackay man not to return to the court on any further drugs charges or he could face jail time.
"Within two months of a large fine for drugs, again you are back in court. If you want to keep it up, that's exactly where you're heading," Mr Dwyer said.
The court was told that on February 23 at Mount Pleasant police searched a house where Bennett admitted he had steroids in the fridge. Police found eight vials of drugs in the fridge, and two vials in a bedroom.
Bennett admitted sourcing the drugs for personal use to increase his muscle mass.
Bennett's solicitor, Rosemary Varley, of Morton Lawyers, told the court that Bennett, who had grown up in Moranbah, had completed a diesel fitting apprenticeship after leaving school.
He was now working in the mines and was also studying personal training and was in the process of relocating to Brisbane.
Bennett was fined $1500 and a conviction was recorded.
dailymercury.com.au/news/stern-warning-for-steroid-possession/3001813/
Those were the words of Mackay Magistrate Damien Dwyer after Anthony Matthew Bennett pleaded guilty to possessing dangerous drugs yesterday.
Mr Dwyer warned the 28-year-old Mackay man not to return to the court on any further drugs charges or he could face jail time.
"Within two months of a large fine for drugs, again you are back in court. If you want to keep it up, that's exactly where you're heading," Mr Dwyer said.
The court was told that on February 23 at Mount Pleasant police searched a house where Bennett admitted he had steroids in the fridge. Police found eight vials of drugs in the fridge, and two vials in a bedroom.
Bennett admitted sourcing the drugs for personal use to increase his muscle mass.
Bennett's solicitor, Rosemary Varley, of Morton Lawyers, told the court that Bennett, who had grown up in Moranbah, had completed a diesel fitting apprenticeship after leaving school.
He was now working in the mines and was also studying personal training and was in the process of relocating to Brisbane.
Bennett was fined $1500 and a conviction was recorded.
dailymercury.com.au/news/stern-warning-for-steroid-possession/3001813/