Home Australia Suspicious — Suspicious Packages at Consulates across Melbourne and Canberra

Suspicious — Suspicious Packages at Consulates across Melbourne and Canberra

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(adapted photo – UK Independent)

by Dee McLachlan

I heard the news around 3:00 pm yesterday. Suspicious packages were being investigated at many consulates across Melbourne, and Channel 9 News reported that 18 hazardous material units had been deployed. I had no idea there were so many units available at such short notice. And 13 consulates were all being investigated at the same time.

Impressive. I wondered who had planned such an event, and why?

The Channel 9 reporter said that authorities were still determining what was in the packages, and “how malicious it is, and whether it was designed to create chaos.”

Then, I noticed this Tweet from a Sky News reporter Annelise Nielsen:

“Police have just confirmed, in what may be coincidence of the century, that hazmat training is being conducted at the US Embassy [in Canberra] this afternoon. Has been booked in for weeks.”

The Guardian wrote:

“The United States, Pakistani, Swiss, Indian, South Korean and New Zealand consulates in Melbourne are among a number of foreign diplomatic headquarters across the city and in Canberra targeted with suspicious packages.

“It is not known which embassies in Canberra have been affected, although it is understood a hazmat team was performing an unrelated training activity at the US embassy.

“The alerts come after Sydney’s Argentinian consulate was partially evacuated on Monday following reports of a suspicious substance. The powder, similarly contained in clear plastic bags within an envelope, was deemed not dangerous.”

This reminds me of the London bombings.  On the 7th of July, the day of the London bombings, the head of the security-related Visor Consultants, Peter Powerspoke on radio and TV. His company had been commissioned to carry out an emergency drill for simultaneous bombings at 9am at the very stations (Edgware, Aldgate and Piccadilly) that were affected by the explosions. 

Interestingly, the Victorian Police News doesn’t mention the suspicious packages. For January 9th, they had reports on: an appeal for public assistance to help locate missing Footscray woman; a missing camper; needles in a train seat, etc. But nothing on the 18 hazardous material units.

But the MSM are still reporting it as a real event.

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19 COMMENTS

  1. A quart of the best ice cream* to the first three Gumshoers who report back to us that they have e-mailed the authorities for details about the ubiquitous Hazmat unites, or any other fishy aspect of the case.

    Come on, Dee can’t do everything. And you can’t get in trouble for asking how many Hazmat units there are, can you?

    *Recommend you ask me for Moose-tracks ice cream. It is to die for.

  2. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-10/suspicious-packages-sent-to-embassies-man-charged/10704622

    “Man charged after 38 suspicious packages sent to consulates and embassies. A Victorian man has been charged after dozens of suspicious packages were sent to consulates and embassies in Melbourne, Sydney and Canberra. He has been charged with sending dangerous articles to be carried by a postal service.

    Investigators will allege in court that the man sent 38 parcels containing a substance that they believe was “sourced from his Shepparton home”, to consulates and embassies in the three cities.

    Police said they had recovered 29 of the packages and planned to have them forensically tested.
    “There is no ongoing threat to the general public,” both police forces said in a joint statement. “Police have identified all intended recipients and have put processes in place to recover the outstanding packages.”

  3. “There is no ongoing threat to the general public,” Signed, Jahar’s Gitmo interrogators at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, April 19, 2013.

    But how can they be so sure?

    “…charged with sending dangerous articles to be carried by a postal service.” Dee, I bet that’s the key. Now we will not be allowed to mail anything anymore.

    I recently received a notice of How To Send Mail to a Congressman that is so complicated I still don’t know what it means.

    • Here is a nice story. In the 1980s my husband and I sent a wedding gift to an ambassador. The wrapping paper was silvery so I guess it made the alarm go off. Our PO Box address was the only sender-address listed on the outside of the box. The police went to Adelaide GPO to ask who was the renter of that box.

      Please sit down because what I am about to say will shock you. Remember this was 30 years ago:

      Auspost would not release our names to the police, for privacy reasons!!!

      OH THOSE WERE THE DAYS.

  4. When drills occur the very same day as the “terrorist attack” it stinks of “false flag”. New York 9/11 and London 7/7 followed this standard operating procedure.
    The only thing missing here is the boom.
    Maybe this little op is laying the groundwork for something that comes to fruition later…

  5. I have now listened to the Channel 9 video above, He said ‘Was this just to create chaos or was there a more sinister purpose involved?”

    Can you picture a guy in Shepparton (no offense to Sheppartonites) waking up this morning and saying “I think I’ll create chaos.”

    And instead of doing whatever it is one would do for that purpose (what would you do?), he sends envelopes to such embassies as US, Russia, and Singapore.

    Next question: Did it happen at all? Has a Sheppartonnite actually been arrested?

    Should we build a wall around Victoria? If chaos is created, cui bono?

    Having sent 29 packages he paid at least $29.

  6. Its always in the numbers of course 38 is an 11 and the 29 is always used as a coded 2and9, 11. I’m guessing the culprit will be a 33 year old man

  7. Don’t these idiots in government employ ever give up. Since when have parcels or envelopes sent at the same time ever got to their destination on time? How is it that all parcels arrived on the same day? A couple of years ago I mailed a video disc to Adelaide from Perth and it took 19 days to arrive. Don’t tell me that Australia Post has become that more efficient.

    Even if the accused sent a parcel planning it to arrive on a particular day, there is no guarantee that it would arrive when planned, but to say numerous parcels arrived as planned is the height of stupidity.

    Don’t forget that the Trump administration is in the process of bringing down the Global elites and they are in a state of panic, they don’t know what to do next, to keep CONTROL. I feel that there will be a series of false flag events in which many innocent people around the World will be killed, in the next few months, at least until some of these criminals have been found guilty by criminal courts or military tribunals.

    • Dead right in your post Aussie. I ordered something from Amazon Aust on the 9th December,here we are a month later and I still have not received my order.
      So how in hell, can this ALLEGED guys parcels all be delivered on the same day ????? Something very strange going on here, methinks.

  8. The strategy behind misusing the word “suspicious” is known by the fact that attaching any such quality to an inanimate substance or object is, in fact, a superstition and the exploitation of such a condition is, in fact, charlatanism

  9. IMHO this is a false flag to get the St Kilda gang riots and similar stories that make it hard to spin Australia as a multicultural paradise off the front pages for a while.
    The white powder was sent to FOREIGN locations (embassies). Get it? In its own little way this aspect of the operation attacks xenophobia. Just like those who don’t like the rioting Sudanese gangs.
    Yep, a hell of a lot of responders at the ready. Makes you wonder what they do the rest of the time.

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