Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Gold Stealing Detection Unit

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Formed
  
1907

Size
  
2,645,615 km

Gold Stealing Detection Unit

Legal personality
  
Governmental: Government agency

Operations jurisdiction*
  
State of Western Australia, Australia

Governing body
  
Government of Western Australia

General nature
  
Law enforcement Civilian police

The Gold Stealing Detection Unit (GSDU), or Gold Stealing Detective Squad (GSDS), is a special unit of the Western Australian Police, based in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia. It investigates criminal activity and allegations at all stages of the gold production process in the state.

Contents

The unit consists of a very small number of detectives but is the oldest specialist police service in Western Australia.

History

The squad was formed in 1907, at a time when gold theft was rife in the region. It was formed after Detective Sergeant Kavanagh, in charge of the Kalgoorlie police, submitted a report in 1906 on the seriousness of gold theft in the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia. A Royal Commission determined in February 1907, that his allegations were justified and a special police service was formed in late 1907.

Previous to this, the Chamber of Mines operated a special service called The Bureau for investigatory services. The Chamber continued to financially support the GSDS. The unit is based now, as it was then, at Egan Street in Kalgoorlie.

Walsh and Pitman

In April 1926, Inspector John Walsh and Sergeant Alexander Pitman of the GSDS were murdered while investigating gold theft. Their bodies were dumped down the Belle of Kalgoorlie mine shaft at Miller's Find, Binduli, near Kalgoorlie. The murders and the subsequent press reporting about the limited resources available to the GSDS at the time had a similar effect of the 1907 reporting of issues. The lengthy investigation, eventual capture, and execution of the murderers, William Coulter and Phillip Trefene, was of considerable interest to the Perth press at the time.

Walsh's and Pitman's funeral in Perth on 17 May 1926 was a procession watched by thousands, and attended by a large number of police officers. The memorial to the two policemen was originally of low interest; however, in the year of the state's centenary it was unveiled by the Governor. The memorial was originally erected outside the police building in James Street, Perth, moved for a time to the WA Police Headquarters, and is now located in the WA Police Academy at Joondalup.

Recent history

The squad was part of the Western Australian Police Department until 31 May 1995, when the latter became the Western Australia Police Service.

On 2 October 2007, the unit celebrated its centenary in Kalgoorlie Town Hall.

As 75% of all gold mined in Australia hails from Western Australia, gold mining is an important industry in the state and it is a requirement for anybody to work in the industry to obtain a GSDU clearance certificate. In 2008, 256 tonnes of gold were mined in Western Australia, being worth A$12.06 billion to the state.

Current functions

The GSDU provides the only regular police service to many of the isolated mines in Western Australia.

The functions of the GSDU continue many of the 1907 GSDS functions.. Including by providing clearance certificates for prosepctive mine workers, inspections, advice and education, and its main role for 100 years, prosecution of gold theft.

The GSDU currently consists of six detectives, funded entirely by the WA Chamber of Mines.

Recent Operations

The GSDU arrested six men in October 2004 Norseman and charged them with offences ranging from stealing to possessing unlicensed firearms.

In January 2009, GSDU charged six men with theft of safety equipment at mines.

Harking back to the means by which gold stealers operated before the first world war with treatment plants, in December 2013, the GSDU were investigating a processing plant in Kalgoorlie.

References

Gold Stealing Detection Unit Wikipedia