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Swedish police arrest man in 'drugs bust' after finding huge stash of sugar in car

The bags turned out to be filled with dextrose

Adam Withnall
Sunday 04 September 2016 09:13 EDT
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Police said they had never heard of a case like it
Police said they had never heard of a case like it (Swedish Police)

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Police in Sweden were left red-faced when they arrested a man in what was believed to be a major drugs bust, only to find he was carrying bags full of sugar, not amphetamines.

Officers found around 20 plastic bags of white powder stuffed in the back of a car after they stopped the driver in Skellefteå, in the north of the country.

Upon questioning, the man is alleged to have admitted to being in possession of amphetamines, according to the local Skellefteå newspaper Norran, before changing his story to say the bags in fact contained dextrose, a form of sugar derived from starches.

A quick on-the-spot test also suggested the presence of drugs, so officers received an arrest warrant from the district court to take the man into custody.

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But according to the Swedish news agency TT, more advanced lab tests showed the white powder was indeed nothing more than dextrose.

Skellefteå police spokesman Lars Westermark said, according to a translation by the Swedish edition of The Local: “I have never heard of anything like this happening before.

“But these quick tests have been approved, they’re used for screening.

“The instruments used are sensitive so one explanation to the result could be that there had been amphetamine in the proximity of which microscopic residues had been left behind.”

The man has since been released. Police say it remains unclear why the man initially said he was in possession of drugs.

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