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Sam Fisher arrives at the County Court of Victoria in Melbourne in April 2024
Former St Kilda player Sam Fisher was jailed for up to five years and four months after admitting involvement in a drug trafficking scheme. Photograph: Diego Fedele/AAP
Former St Kilda player Sam Fisher was jailed for up to five years and four months after admitting involvement in a drug trafficking scheme. Photograph: Diego Fedele/AAP

Former AFL player Sam Fisher jailed for at least three years for drug trafficking

This article is more than 3 months old
  • Ex-St Kilda player pleaded guilty to six drug offences
  • Judge finds 41-year-old’s drug use had spiralled out of control

Former AFL player Sam Fisher has been handed a maximum five-year and four-month prison term after pleading guilty to six drug offences.

The charges include trafficking a commercial quantity of methamphetamine, cocaine and 1,4-Butanediol, and three counts of drug possession. The former St Kilda defender was arrested by police in May 2022 for trafficking 996g of methamphetamine and 82g of cocaine from Melbourne to Western Australia.

Fisher had picked up a rangehood from Harvey Norman in Moorabbin and then delivered it to a Melbourne patisserie, with the drugs inside. Police intercepted the package on 20 April, and found two hidden parcels containing the drugs inside the rangehood.

Fisher spent 48 days in prison after he was arrested and was then bailed to a rehabilitation centre where he spent 105 days.

Judge Gerard Mullaly said Fisher’s drug use had spiralled out of control after the former All-Australian player retired from football in 2016 and struggled to to find consistent employment.

“You acknowledge now you were fiercely addicted and consuming multiple drugs in an uncontrollable fashion,” Judge Mullaly said. “You began to move in circles with others involving drugs. Your chaotic lifestyle came to an abrupt end when you were arrested.”

After retirement, Fisher tried to continue to play football in a lower league and then as an assistant coach but he suffered two serious injuries. He then worked in marketing and property development, but after Covid-19 hit he suffered financial hardship when a project in Frankston was derailed.

The judge said there were “powerful reasons” to hand Fisher a sentence below the standard due to the lesser role he played in the plot, his significant reform and deep remorse.

“You are a long way from the daily drug taker of 2022,” Judge Mullaly said.

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The judge said Fisher had made significant steps since rehabilitation and was now mentoring other men “to demonstrate there can be a way out of addiction”. He said Fisher had received “considerable support” for his rehabilitation from St Kilda Football Club and the AFL Players Association.

The 41-year-old will spend at least three years behind bars before he is eligible for parole. He has already served 48 days of that sentence.

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