THE SALE OF counterfeit alcohol has been linked to a number of suspicious deaths as Revenue warned of a crackdown on the illicit trade before Christmas.

A number of rogue dealers have been caught in the past 12 months by Revenue and gardaí and they say this time of year is always the busiest for the traders.

Pat Gralton is the Revenue enforcement manager in the Border Midlands West Region.

He explained that all across Europe there are deaths related to the sale of fake alcohol.

Revenue raided this bottling plant last year. Source: Revenue

He said: “Alcohol is a high-risk product. If you look up the Czech Republic or Turkey for counterfeit alcohol deaths, you will see there have been scores of people who have passed away.

“I don’t want to go into too much detail but there are suspicious deaths in Ireland with it as well.”

Illegal alcohol has been detected by Revenue across the country. Officers check licenced premises and use scientific analysis to ensure their stock is the real deal.

However, Gralton described how intricate the counterfeiting process is.

Fake alcohol ready to be stickered and shipped. Source: Revenue

He added: “The counterfeiting process is so good, the bottles, the labels, the corkings are very good. It’s almost impossible to detect unless you go in knowing what you’re looking for.

It’s the unscrupulous trader who purchases his stock from a white van at night who is the problem.

“If you’re a licenced premises, there’s a way of getting stock in. The trader who purchased from someone who just has a mobile number that you ring and you get a delivery isn’t doing things by the book.”

The counterfeit alcohol which Revenue is detecting is a type of industrial alcohol customers would usually find in nail varnish remover ,windscreen washer fluid and perfumes.”

Raids

Last year, Revenue raided a premises close to the border in Louth and discovered seven people there applying counterfeit labels to bottles of vodka which were ready for filling.

There were 4,500 bottles still there at the time of the raid but a large amount had gone through on their way to market traders and certain off-licences.

A still being used to manufacture the dangerous alcohol.

Alcohol safety activists have warned of the dangers of using the illegal drinks.

Drinkaware’s chief medical advisor professor Paul Wallace explained: “Commonly used substitutes for ethanol include chemicals used in cleaning fluids, nail polish remover and automobile screen wash, as well as methanol and isopropanol which are used in antifreeze and some fuels.

“These other types of alcohol can produce similar effects to ethanol in terms of making you feel tipsy. But they are also potentially very dangerous.