Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Krystle Dawn Mitchelitis,Charles Matthew Cook,Rejean Arsenault,Robert Vezina charged with possession of cocaine

Posted On 11:51 by Reporter 0 comments

Three bricks of the drug with a total weight of 3,352 grams were seized in a room at the Cambridge Suites, Monday night, after police executed a search warrant. The amount the drug carries an estimated street value of $670,000, more than double the amount of the police’s largest seizure of $250,000 last week.
“This has been an ongoing investigation that the street crime unit has been undertaking for the last couple of months in regards to cocaine, its distribution and its source locations,” said Staff Sgt. Paul Jobe. “We figure this will have a substantial impact on the streets, but it’s not long-term, we have to keep up.”
Four males and one female were arrested; one from Sydney, three from Quebec and one from Toronto. Police reported Tuesday that another suspect in the case remains at large.
Five people appeared in provincial court Tuesday charged with possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking and conspiracy to traffic in cocaine.
The five are: Charles Matthew Cook, 22, George Street, Sydney; Rejean Arsenault, 52, Pointe Fortune, Que.; Robert Vezina, 58, LaSalle, Que.; Michael Giordano, 41, Saint-Lazare, Que.; and Krystle Dawn Mitchelitis, 19, Toronto.
Federal prosecutor David Iannetti opposed the release of the five who were remanded into custody until Thursday for bail hearings for Giordano, Cook and Mitchelitis and status hearings for Arsenault and Vezina, who have asked for bail hearings in French.
Arsenault will be represented by a lawyer from Quebec.
While the investigation continues, Chief Dave Wilson expressed concerns the drugs may be tied to organized crime.
“My best guess is yes,” said Wilson, when asked about the operation being the work of organized crime. “Until we complete the investigation we won’t know for sure.
“I think it’s a possibility because there are so many Cape Bretoners right now going to work transient wise, so they are all across the country and they are making these contacts, contacts with people who are working in the criminal world and coming back here they have a connection to bring the stuff in.”
With two substantial seizures in the past seven days, Jobe said the months of work by the street crime unit is beginning to show great successes.
“This is all based on investigative techniques and getting into the bowels of the drug trade,” he said. “We’ve started off at the street level, now the officers have targeted the major seizures at the higher level and we will continue.”
The large amount of cocaine being seized by police continues to support the theory that the drug has become the drug of choice in Cape Breton, a trend which bothers Jobe.
“Since I’ve been here I’ve seen cocaine become the drug of choice and hashish is almost non-existent on the street today as opposed to a number of years ago when (hashish) was the drug of choice,” said Jobe. “We’re living in an advanced age and we’ve seen the OxyContin age when that was a very serious drug on the street. We’ve now gone to cocaine and my only fear is what’s coming next.”


Monday, 31 March 2008

In the Comfort Zone Hedge fund manager Matthew MacIsaac of MM Asset Management Inc had been charged with conspiracy to traffic cocaine.

Posted On 23:27 by Reporter 0 comments

Mr. MacIsaac, ranked among Canada's most successful fund managers, had been charged with conspiracy to traffic cocaine.
He was among 33 people arrested after police raided a bar called the Comfort Zone at 4:30 a.m. on a Sunday. Sources say Mr. MacIsaac, who lives in a nearby loft, tried to explain the $600 in cash in his pockets to police by saying: "I'm a hedge fund manager."The arrest came after a six-week investigation known as Project White Rabbit, a probe that began when a 26-year-old Hamilton man died of an accidental overdose after allegedly purchasing drugs at the Comfort Zone. Police seized heroin, cocaine, ecstasy and GHB - known as the date rape drug - valued at $30,000 at the club, along with $35,000 cash."Drugs were being used openly; drugs were being sold openly," said Toronto Detective Sergeant Ed Roseto.Over two weeks, MM Asset Management repeatedly denied any involvement by an executive with the firm, until Mr. MacIsaac's lawyer, Austin Cooper, confirmed Friday that his client works at the hedge fund, and had been charged. He said the fund manager, who is free on bail, has yet to enter a plea.MM Asset Management executive Ben Cubitt insisted two weeks ago that the Mr. MacIsaac who serves as the fund's secretary was not the same Mr. MacIsaac charged after the raid. Mr. MacIsaac's first lawyer, Lenny Hochberg, declined to comment when asked if he was representing the same Mr. MacIsaac who worked at the fund.Mr. Cooper quickly confirmed the affiliation when he was asked on Friday. He also said there had been no attempt to hide the information.
"He is a good man," Mr. Cooper said. "I'm afraid that he was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and that police made a sweep and arrested everybody in the place. Of course, we are going to defend him vigorously."
Mr. MacIsaac likely earned $3-million last year. He and partner Hillel Meltz, MM Asset Management's president, and two remaining colleagues at the $300-million fund would have split $10-million of performance-based fees on a fund that returned 17 per cent for investors.
Through his lawyer, Mr. MacIsaac declined to be interviewed. Mr. Meltz was unavailable last week.
A rival fund manager said Mr. MacIsaac is building a sprawling cottage near Tofino, on Vancouver Island. MM Asset Management runs what's known as an event-driven fund called MMCap Fund Inc. that plays takeovers and other stock market moves. It has stakes in a number of small Canadian resource companies. The fund was launched in 2002 and has among the highest returns in the industry, with 20-per-cent plus performance in five of the past six years and two years of 40-per-cent-plus returns.
Among its backers are Arrow Hedge Partners Inc., a well-known fund-of-funds manager that has $20-million invested. Sources say Toronto-based MM Asset Management has told its institutional and wealthy individual clients about the charges against Mr. MacIsaac. Investors in the fund say Mr. Meltz flew back from his home in Israel to help deal with the issue. "These guys are great traders, they've put up great numbers. Obviously, though, this problem is a setback,' said one investor in MM Asset Management.The "setback" began with a St. Patrick's Day celebration that saw Mr. MacIsaac attend two parties before heading to the Comfort Zone club about 4 a.m., sources said. He took about $800 out of bank machines for the evening and had $600 in his pocket when he was arrested. There were 150 people in the club at the time.He was allegedly approached for drugs by the undercover police officer, a source said. Mr. MacIsaac allegedly tracked down some drugs and gave them to her. When she insisted on paying him, he allegedly refused.
The hedge fund filed a report on charges facing Mr. MacIsaac with the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) a few days after the arrest, sources said. The regulator must be notified if a registered company executive is charged with a criminal offence. The OSC put out a notice last Thursday stating that Mr. MacIsaac's registration - which is needed for him to manage money - is now being reviewed monthly, rather than undergoing the typical annual review. MM Asset Management's principals started their careers at Connecticut-based K2 Advisors LLC, a large U.S. hedge fund that states on its website that it "adheres to the highest standards of ethical conduct in an era of increased scrutiny and transparency."


Friday, 7 March 2008

Haresh Kutappan was sentenced to four years in prison last week for dealing drugs

Posted On 10:32 by Reporter 0 comments

Haresh Kutappan was sentenced to four years in prison last week for dealing drugs out of his Halifax apartment.The 30-year-old native of Malaysia came to Canada on a student visa in 1997. He lived in British Columbia for a few years, earned a computer science degree and later moved to Halifax in hopes of finding employment.But he soon lost his job at a local call centre and found himself without work or a place to live.That’s when the young man started selling drugs to survive.
The career choice was lucrative but short-lived.Police arrested Mr. Kutappan on Oct. 4 for remaining in the country after his student visa had expired. The arrest led to a search of his Robie Street apartment and the discovery of Mr. Kutappan’s drug stash.Officers seized about 1,100 grams of marijuana, 85 grams of powdered cocaine,15 grams of magic mushrooms and 281 ecstasy pills. They also seized $11,150 and various drug paraphernalia, including packaging material, measuring devices and score sheets.At first, Mr. Kutappan pleaded not guilty to the four counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking.But on Feb. 27 he changed his plea because the judge dismissed the argument that his charter rights were violated during the police search.The usual punishment for selling large amounts of cocaine ranges between two and five years in prison.In this case, federal Crown attorney Tim McLaughlin asked for a sentence on the higher end of the scale, while defence lawyer Brad Sarson argued for a term of incarceration between three and four years.
Justice Robert Wright of Nova Scotia Supreme Court decided on four years in prison, which equates to 38 months after time served is factored in.
The judge noted that Mr. Kutappan had no prior criminal record but said "nonetheless the courts must send the message that there will be serious penal consequences for those who choose to engage in such a nefarious trade, which inflicts such widespread damage to our communities."Because of his immigrant status, Mr. Kutappan is not eligible for day parole. Upon his release from prison, he will be immediately deported to Malaysia


Tuesday, 4 March 2008

Dennis Paul Paddison, Kelsey Nerbas,Matthew Reed,Dereck Hotner, Dale Handlen drug bust in Australia involving a shipping container from Canada.

Posted On 09:16 by Reporter 0 comments


Australian police say they expect more arrests will be made here in Canada following this week's huge drug bust in Brisbane involving more than $30 million worth of cocaine and ecstasy. Five B.C. men and an Australian face drug smuggling charges after being arrested in the capital of the state of Queensland on Wednesday.
The seized computer monitors, some of which contained cocaine and ecstasy in a shipment from B.C. Australian customs officials found the drugs on Sept. 8, stuffed into computer monitors in a shipping container that originated in the Lower Mainland.
Bruce Hill, who is in charge of international operations for the Australian Federal Police, told CBC News that he believes more arrests are imminent."We have a federal police officer from Washington in Canada working closely with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. I'm sure, as a result of that, we'll definitely get some very good results out of this."Australian suspect known to police
Hill says the mastermind behind the cocaine import scheme is a well-known organized crime figure in Sydney.
"We will allege in court that he was the intended recipient and financier of this operation from the Australian side. Now we've got inquiries going in Canada to try and establish who the principals are over there."

The five B.C. men arrested in Brisbane have been identified as Dennis Paul Paddison, 40, of Abbotsford; Dereck Hotner, 34, also of Abbotsford;,, 40; Matthew Reed, 26; and Kelsey Nerbas, 28. Nerbas, who had been living in Australia, is a former resident of Kelowna, B.C.All five remain in custody and are next scheduled to appear in court in November. The smuggling charges carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
This is the second recent drug bust in Australia involving a shipping container from Canada.
Four months ago, Australian authorities seized 1.2 million ecstasy tablets from a container in Melbourne, and arrested one man in Melbourne and three men in Sydney.
Michael Carmody, the CEO of the Australian Customs Service, says the two sets of arrests should serve as a warning.
"It does seem that people believe that by shipping goods through what would be seen as a friendly benign country in this area, they thought that they would avoid our scrutiny, and they haven't, and that's probably a message for others who might like to try that."


Friday, 8 February 2008

Norman Longmoore ecstasy pills laced with methamphetamine

Posted On 15:04 by Reporter 0 comments


23-year-old Norman Longmoore, of East Ryegate, is accused of selling ecstasy pills laced with methamphetamine.

Last week police arrested a St. Johnsbury man for selling that drug.
Investigators say ecstasy pills laced with methamphetamine are being smuggled across the border from Canada.


Monday, 28 January 2008

June Minnie Flett

Posted On 08:52 by Reporter 0 comments

June Minnie Flett, 31, is wanted on a Canada-wide warrant for parole violation. Sentenced to four years, one month for prostitution, robbery and drug possession in May 2004, she was given statutory release Dec. 4, 2007, after serving two-thirds of her time. Her release was revoked Jan. 11.


Friday, 18 January 2008

Ranjit Singh Cheema ,Saliendra Narayan

Posted On 01:48 by Reporter 0 comments

A pair of accused drug traffickers wanted in the United States has lost their fight against extradition.
US authorities say Ranjit Singh Cheema and Saliendra Narayan were part of an international heroin ring.
Today, the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear their appeal against extradition.
It's not yet clear when the pair would be forced to return to the United States.


Wednesday, 16 January 2008

Dr. Sean Buckingham

Posted On 01:48 by Reporter 0 comments



Justice James Adams sentenced Buckingham to seven years and nine months in jail for sexual assault, assault and drug trafficking, but not before issuing some harsh words to the St. John's physician.
Adams slammed Buckingham for using his "privileged position" as a doctor to abuse his patients and breach their trust.
"Violence can take on many forms ... and I consider this to be a violent crime, even though he did not beat them up," Adams said.
"Instead, he beat them down."
Since Buckingham has already spent nearly five months in jail, Adams gave him credit for roughly double time (as is customary in the justice system) and deducted nine months from the sentence.
Buckingham must also submit a DNA sample and will be listed on Canada's sex offender registry. He is also prohibited from owning any firearms for 10 years after his release from jail.
He showed no emotion and said nothing as he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs.
The 47-year-old was found guilty Dec. 10 of 12 of 18 charges of sexual assault, assault and drug trafficking by a jury of six men and six women.
Several of Buckingham's female former patients had testified during the two-month trial, each offering disturbing testimony about how the doctor crossed the line by demanding sexual favours in return for prescription drugs, like OxyContin and Lorazepam.


Friday, 11 January 2008

Thuan Van Ha

Posted On 14:30 by Reporter 0 comments

Thuan Van Ha, 42, was sentenced in October to serve two years less a day in the community for convictions of drug production and possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking.
Ha was placed on electronic monitoring for the first eight months of the conditional sentence.
The Crown had asked for 18 months in jail.
Ha was charged after police found about 250 marijuana plants at various stages of growth inside his home on the 900 block of Rae Street.
On Thursday, agent for the federal Crown, Doug Curliss, argued the sentencing judge erred in imposing the community-based sentence by not taking the circumstances of the case, nor case law, into full consideration.
Curliss said Ha accrued a gambling debt and, despite making good money as a welder, decided the best way to deal with the debt was by starting a grow op. As part of that grow op, Ha caused damage to his house and stole electricity from SaskPower, Curliss said.
In asking for the court to consider overturning the sentence, Curliss told Justices William Vancise, Gene Anne Smith and Darla Hunter that grow ops are a serious problem in the community, with many growers seeing it as "quick and easy money."


Thursday, 10 January 2008

Thomaz Nataluk

Posted On 16:48 by Reporter 0 comments

Thomaz Nataluk, 22, whom court heard yesterday was allegedly one of Manitoba's most significant cocaine dealers with ties to organized crime in B.C., was granted bail yesterday by Justice John Scurfield, who imposed strict conditions on the man.
"I'm taking a chance on you because you're a young man who had no criminal history prior to this," Scurfield told Nataluk in court. "You've got to be absolutely straight."
Crown prosecutor Chris Mainella accused Nataluk yesterday of being "the triple threat," as an alleged multi-kilogram level drug dealer, arms dealer and crack cooker.
Police arrested Nataluk last June following a dust-up on Broadway during which time he allegedly elbowed one cop in the forehead.
Cops found two one-kilogram bricks of 80% pure cocaine in his Jeep, as well as a $27,000, 18-karat gold Swiss Breitling watch on his wrist.
They also found more than $500,000 cash in his downtown apartment -- much of it in packaged bundles in the fridge next to normal food like chip dip and juice -- as well as 12 kg of powdered cocaine and crack in the suite next door, which Mainella called a "crack factory."
Some of the cocaine bricks found there were stamped with the same "2706" mark found on the two bricks recovered from the Jeep.
Also in the neighbouring suite was a gym bag containing 14 guns, including two M-11 9-mm compact submachine guns, often called MAC-11s. All the guns were vacuum sealed in plastic, which Mainella said is often a sign they were freshly smuggled into Canada. The Crown pegged the street value of the guns at between $18,000 and $23,000
Nataluk was charged with 62 offences, and at the time of his arrest, Winnipeg police said they could not remember officers in Manitoba ever seizing such a quantity of drugs, guns and cash all at once


Sunday, 6 January 2008

Abdula Fauthwla ( Polla Banan )

Posted On 20:40 by Reporter 0 comments

During the 1980s, Norwegian police issued an arrest warrant for Fauthwla on charges of heroin trafficking, possession of weapons and ammunition, possession of poisons and other charges.
Norwegian Police, though, lost track of the suspect before he could be arrested and he fled the country. Police now believe Fauthwla somehow made his way to Canada under an assumed name, filing a refugee claim as Polla Banan and eventually gaining Canadian citizenship under that name. Since then, he's lived under the radar.
It's not clear how authorities uncovered Fauthwla's real identity. All CBSA would say is that Fauthwla was ordered deported on July 31, 2007 for misrepresenting himself and that a warrant for his arrest was issued at that time.
He is being held at Maplehurst Detention Centre pending a review by a the Immigration and Refugee Board


Sunday, 30 December 2007

false roof compartment of a Canadian truck

Posted On 01:00 by Reporter 0 comments

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers here seized $373,000 and 127 pounds of marijuana concealed in a false roof compartment of a Canadian truck. The truck and trailer arrived at the port of entry Saturday night at 8 p.m. carrying a shipment of aluminum railing components bound for California.
CBP officers referred the truck/trailer for a Vehicle and Cargo Inspection System (VACIS) x-ray type examination which revealed a possible anomaly in the roof area of the tractor. Further inspection of the area revealed a hydraulic-operated compartment behind some shelving which concealed the marijuana and currency. The contraband had apparently been sprayed with oleoresin capsicum (OC spray) and vinegar in an attempt to defeat inspection by CBP K-9 units.
"Narcotics and currency smuggling in the Pacific Northwest continues to be a border security threat," said Pat Hinchey, CBP Sumas area port director. "Our CBP officers will maintain their vigilance in protecting our nation’s borders from the many threats we face daily."
The currency, marijuana (valued at $381,000 USD) and the truck and trailer were all seized by CBP officers. The case is being investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).


Monday, 24 December 2007

31-year-old Oshawa

Posted On 20:17 by Reporter 0 comments


Police arrested a 31-year-old Oshawa, Ontario, man after searching his tractor trailer at 1:28 a.m. Friday when he was trying to enter the United States via the Blue Water Bridge.
He was driving a D&D Freight truck hauling carrots from Toronto to Chicago, said Port Huron police Lt. Paul Reid.The marijuana was discovered in the trailer of the truck.The driver currently is being held in St. Clair County jail


Saturday, 22 December 2007

Dr. Sean Buckingham

Posted On 14:08 by Reporter 0 comments

Dr. Sean Buckingham guilty on five counts of sexual assault, six counts of trafficking painkillers such as OxyContin and Lorazepam, and one count of assault.
During the two-month trial on 18 charges at the Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court in St. John's, patients described in explicit detail how Buckingham provided them drugs in exchange for money and sexual favours over a two-year span.
One of the patients broke down in tears when she testified that the 47-year-old doctor sodomized her and whipped her with a twig while she was naked and tied to a tree at a local park.


Konstantin Gagkayev, 25, and Andre Latendre, 21,Jeffrey Jones, 21.

Posted On 13:44 by Reporter 0 comments


Konstantin Gagkayev, 25, and Andre Latendre, 21, of Windsor, and Jeffrey Jones, 21, of Allan Park, Mich., each face charges of possession for the purpose of trafficking and possession of a controlled substance. Two Windsor men have been charged following a 100-thousand dollar marijuana bust in Chatham-Kent. The OPP pulled over a vehicle on the 401 last night that was exceeding the speed limit and smelled the raw marijuana. About 15-thousand dollars in cash was also seized. Charged are Konstantin Gagkayev and Andre Latendre, both of Windsor and a Michigan man.


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