Two found guilty in Canada of conspiring to import cocaine from Guyana

Published on : December 02, 2015 Topic : Import
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Two men have been found guilty in connection with a cocaine smuggling venture that saw close to Cdn$4 million worth of the drug make its way by sea from Guyana to St. John, New Brunswick, and then to a public storage facility in Mississauga.

According to today’s Mississauga News, Justice Peter Daley found James Buttazzoni, 43, of Mississauga, and Rampersaud Ramlall, 40, of Whitby, guilty in Brampton court on Friday of conspiracy to import cocaine and possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking. The report said that the judge however acquitted both men of importing cocaine. It found that Buttazzoni only became involved with the cocaine when it arrived in Ontario. Evidence, the report said, showed that Ramlall had communication with people in Guyana who were involved in the exportation of the cocaine to Canada. The judge however ruled “his conduct, on the evidence, does not constitute importing.”

The shipment arrived in Canada on May 28, 2012 at the port of St. John, New Brunswick by ship, in a sea container. The estimated value of the cocaine, if sold at the kilogramme level, was approximately Cdn$3.9 million and, if sold at the gramme level, was Cdn$8.9 million, the court heard.

The report said that Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officers opened the container and located 112 kilogrammes of cocaine with a purity of 74 per cent, which was hidden in the wooden pallets located in the container. The container also carried hot sauce, Chinese sauce, seasonings and noodles, court heard.
Customs officers, the report said, then contacted the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who conducted a controlled delivery and tracked the shipment to a public storage facility in Mississauga. The container was equipped with electronic audio and physical surveillance devices, the court heard.

“The process of secreting the cocaine within the wooden pallets, the placement of the pallets within the container, and the shipping of the container from Guyana to New Brunswick was a sophisticated and planned scheme and did not happen by chance or through inadvertence,” the judge ruled.

“This was a sophisticated importing scheme, which involved several persons, some of whom were unknown to each other and others who joined the agreement at times beyond the initial inception of the agreement between the importing parties present in Canada and the parties in Guyana”, the judge said, according to the Mississauga News.

Two others charged in the scheme were freed, the report said.

Source: Stabroek News
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