Sydney court hears Joshua Gotsis allegedly transported $1 million of meth for drug syndicate

·

Sydney plumber Joshua Gotsis, 23, was granted bail in Supreme Court on February 9 over serious drug supply charges relating to his alleged involvement in supplying 1.2kg of cocaine as part of a Sutherland Shire dial-a-dealer operation from July to December last year.

During the hearing, the court heard new information from a police statement of facts which alleged Gotsis was “trusted” to transport 6 kilograms of meth, worth more than a $1 million, for the drug syndicate.

The court had previously heard syndicate organisers allegedly used a “central control phone” to send mass messages to 1900 contacts while buyers would place their orders before runners would deliver their cocaine and MDMA.

Police arrested alleged leader Mohammed El-Sammak, 28, along with Joshua David Hargreaves, 23, and a number of other alleged runners late last year.

nsw_supreme_court
Gotsis was before the courts.

Police alleged Gotsis was the main phone operator with Hargreaves helping out when he was busy.

According to The Daily Telegraph, Gotsis was charged with large commercial drug supply, ongoing drug supply, knowingly dealing with crime proceeds, knowingly directing a criminal group, and failing to comply with a digital evidence access order direction.

On Friday, Gotsis’ defence lawyer Elias Tabchouri told the court the new allegations suggested Gotsis was a “transporter” of the drugs and that he wasn’t involved in the negotiations. Mr Tabchouri further noted that his client was allegedly a “worker” who did not establish the syndicate.

Justice Sarah McNaughton said the allegations against Gotsis were serious, with some involving maximum penalties of life imprisonment and the case against him “appeared reasonably strong.”

She accepted that he was not the “head of the syndicate but appears to have a serious level of responsibility,” adding he was “under the control of the head of the syndicate and did the head of the syndicate’s bidding.”

Justice McNaughton agreed to grant Gotsis bail on the terms that he must live with his grandparents in Revesby, report to police daily, not leave the house without his parents and not take illegal drugs among other strict conditions.

Source: The Herald Sun.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

The Greek Community of Melbourne Schools bids farewell to its graduating students

The Graduation Ceremony of the Class of 2025 of the Greek Community of Melbourne Schools took place on Saturday, 22 November.

Greek Orthodox Community of NSW commemorates Athens Polytechnic Uprising

On Sunday, 23 November 2025, the Greek Orthodox Community of New South Wales hosted a commemoration of the Athens Polytechnic Uprising.

‘We need to talk’: Greek Australian shares her story about ‘street angels, home devils’

Liana Papoutsis urges Greek Aussies to confront silence around family violence, reminding us that “tradition is no excuse” for bad behaviour.

Sydney’s Greek Orthodox community unites with Ukrainians to honour Holodomor victims

The Parish of Saint Savvas of Kalymnos in Banksia joined Ukrainians worldwide on November 23 to mark the 92nd anniversary of the Holodomor.

Mytilenian Brotherhood of Sydney set for annual cherry-picking weekend in Canberra

The Mytilenian Brotherhood of Sydney & NSW is gearing up for its much-loved Cherry Picking Weekend on Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 December 2025.

You May Also Like

TGH Exclusive: Goulburn’s oldest Greek community member turns 100

Να τα Χιλιάσει! Beloved mother, yiayia and great yiayia Mary Kalenderidis turns 100, claiming the title of Goulburn’s oldest Greek community member.

Call for submissions: Greek Australian writers invited to publish in ‘O Logos’ journal

The Hellenic Writers’ Association of Australia has announced a call for submissions for its annual literary journal, O Logos.

Remembering Eleni Skoura, Greece’s first female Member of Parliament

On January 18, 1953, Eleni Skoura, a lawyer from Volos is elected as the first female member of the Greek Parliament