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Friday, September 27, 2024

Canadian Authorities Drop Charges in Large Cartel Connected Trafficking Network

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


In the midst of secret federal court proceedings and on the eve of a defence application to drop all charges, the Crown terminated the prosecution of five people accused of running a massive, cross-border drug trafficking operation involving Mexican cartels.

At the time charges were announced, police said it was believed the $55-million drug bust involving nearly 1 ton of methamphetamine and 6 kilograms of cocaine was the largest ever in Alberta.

With three sets of stays issued last week, last April and in 2023, 10 of the 15 people originally charged in the investigation dubbed Project Cobra are no longer before the courts.

 
Ricco King the alleged leader of the organization, who has ties to both Calgary and Halifax, was one of the five people who walked away from their charges. This is the second time in five years he's escaped international drug importation charges.

Last week, federal Crown prosecutors stayed all charges faced by King, Jarett Mackenzie, 34, Elias Ade, 40, Abdul Akbar, 39, and Kari-Lynn Grant, 53; the alleged leaders and those facing the most serious offences.

The move came one day before lawyers for the accused were to make a Jordan application, where they were set to argue the charges should be dropped because of unreasonable delay in getting the case to trial.

At the same time, defense lawyers were fighting in federal court for the disclosure of information the attorney general didn't want handed over due to national security concerns. The disclosure involved investigative techniques used by the RCMP.

Federal court filings show that the day after the stays were issued, the attorney general filed a notice of discontinuance on all matters, meaning prosecutors won't have to hand over any of the information the government was fighting to keep secret.

The Public Prosecution Service of Canada refused to explain the decision to issue the stays but sent CBC News a statement saying the Crown fulfilled its duty to "continually assess whether there remains a reasonable prospect of conviction based on the admissible evidence."

"The prosecution has assessed that no longer remains the case," wrote the PPSC.

Mackenzie's lawyer, Gavin Wolch, praised the Crown for "keeping an objective eye on the merits of the prosecution."

"Like any machine with a lot of moving parts, a prosecution like this is a massive undertaking where if one part fails, the machine can collapse," said Wolch.

Akbar's lawyer, Faizan Butt, referenced an accused person's right to full disclosure and the right to a timely prosecution as "basic fundamental principles of justice."

"The remedies for a violation of these principles, which are enshrined in the Charter, can often lead to harsh results," said Butt. "But they are necessary in a democratic society … and serve as procedural guardians for our justice system."


Project Cobra

In September 2022, the Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team (ALERT) announced the fruits of Project Cobra in partnership with a number of law enforcement agencies, including the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Law enforcement agencies from Canada and the United States seized an estimated $55 million in drugs and $7 million in assets in one of the largest such busts in Alberta’s history. Drugs were seized in California, Wyoming, Saskatchewan, British Columbia and Calgary throughout the investigation.

McNeil says Project Cobra is "undoubtedly one of ALERT's biggest successes and the impact of this investigation will be substantial." Coughlan said Operation Cobra didn't just "cut off the head of the snake" it "took the whole damn snake."

The investigation resulted in 15 people facing 80 charges, including drug trafficking, organized crime, money laundering and firearms offences. Now nearly all of the arrests have been stayed.


The people charged, including King, were accused of moving drugs produced by Mexican cartels to Alberta.

Of the 928 kilos of meth seized, 342 kilos was found in Wyoming, 395 kilos was located in Los Angeles, 144 kilos of meth was found in Calgary, and 50 kilos of meth was found near Lake Koocanusa, B.C.




Two of Ricco King's homes, multimillion-dollar mansions in Halifax and Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario were seized by police. Investigators also seized two Lamborghinis, a Porsche, multiple other luxury vehicles and other assets considered, at the time, to be proceeds of organized crime.



 
19 firearms, including handguns, suppressors, rifles and submachine guns, were also collected by police. 

In April, the Crown stayed charges against three others: Jesse Marshall, 54, Daniel Menzul, 34, and Sean Nesbitt, 46. And last year, Lina El-Chammoury, 52, and Belal Fouani, 46, saw their charges dropped.

Months before the stays were issued, three others charged in the Project Cobra investigation pleaded guilty.

An investment company, Fouani Equity Funds Ltd. was also charged with participation in a criminal organization.


Murder Connection

Among those arrested was Talal Fouani. Just weeks after he was initially charged with organized crime offenses, he was shot alongside his wife as they sat in their Bentley outside their southwest Calgary home.

Nakita Baron, 31, died of her injuries. Fouani survived.

In 2020, Fouani testified against his former friend and business associate Cem (Jim) Can at an Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) hearing. Can was arrested along with two Hells Angels associates, accused of extortion and kidnapping related to a stock deal gone bad. The charges were later dropped because of concerns about the credibility of the alleged victim.

Last year, Fouani pleaded guilty to money laundering but has yet to be sentenced and is awaiting a decision on whether his charge will be stayed due to what his lawyer argued is unreasonable delay in the case.

Fouani was accused of laundering money for Canadians involved with importing drugs from Mexican cartels. Police alleged the group of men and women charged in Project Cobra were moving cocaine and methamphetamine produced by Mexican cartels to Alberta.

At the time of Fouani's plea, the charges faced by his sister and brother were stayed.

 
A week after Baron was killed, Michael Tyrel Arnold, 34, of Sherwood Park was arrested by Edmonton police and charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder. But police and prosecutors have not publicly connected him to the organized crime case.

16 comments:

  1. How come I always read that in Canada higher up drug leaders are always let go and never prosecuted? Is it because Canada's judicial system is very liberal or because the judges get kick backs from the criminals? We need to send a few of our judges from Texas up there to show them how it's done. Nuff Said!!!

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    1. Yeah somethings isn’t right over there. The Mexicans might have infiltrated the Canadian government. They sent their kids to law school in Canada and now they are the judges. If so that’s how you play chess!!

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    2. Different laws and rules of evidence and criminal procedure are the difference, not the judges. The US Supreme Court has consistently eroded 4th Amendment protections since the late 60s as a direct consequence of the war on drugs. Therefore you are much more likely to be convicted in a drug case (which usually rely on searches and seizures) in the US compared to Canada, where you would have more protections from police intercepting calls, searching your house, and so on. Go look at how the 4th Amendment was treated in the 1920s-1950s and you’ll be amazed out how much greater protection you had from unreasonable search and seizure if you were arrested for a drug offense in the US in 1940/1950 compared to 1970, 1980, etc. (obviously there were other abuses going on for Communists or other political opponents going on then). Internal checkpoints where the 4th Amendment didn’t apply used to be deemed unconstitutional and illegal until the 70s. Then they started popping up all along the southern border, but not the northern border. Wonder why that is. Nuffy, your politics are showing.

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    3. @1:30 you guys are funny with liberal this liberal that it’s always liberals democrats or progressives. Same story all the time it’s the only thing you will blame for the earth spinning

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  2. Awww cute ! She's pretty by the way , es lo que lo es

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    1. Se me esta antojando la guera paisa.

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    2. Si dreaming of papayas, papusas, y pescado mojado jijiji

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    3. Sounds delicious 🤤

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  3. Don’t blame the judges or the lawyers, blame the cops who fucked up the case. Prosecution chose to drop the charges instead of air dirty laundry. Happens in the US all the time. Many of the dismissals I’ve gotten for clients weren’t because my client was innocent, it was because the cops messed up and the DA didn’t want to embarrass them.

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    1. I can attest to that. I was pulled over with a load of 350 pounds of Mota in the 1980s in Memphis Tennessee I would not give consent to search. They held us for 4 1/2 hours on the side of the road. Ran four dogs around the RV 16 times and magically on the last time it hit but I was watching and it did not hit.

      We were worried about the smell. It was some Piney Green, Mexican cannabis. So we sealed it in wax mixed with primarily mint, but garlic, Cocoa, and nutmeg . We put so much mint in the wax. It was overwhelming.

      After sealing in wax in 8 inch PVC tubes we put them in an a cooler and acrylic. Due to the amount of time they held us on the road, and the fact that I gave no consent to search, and they had zero probable cause other than our Texas license plates. The judge reamed out the attorney general because our deal was one year probation class B misdemeanor. Of course they wanted me to take them back to the Sierras of Durango but that wasn’t happening. I paid $15 a pound for the good stuff and $10 a pound for the 350. I wouldn’t betray a connection regardless but I damn sure wouldn’t screw one up that was that good and that well-connected. And I quite enjoyed telling them to fuck off and do what they had to do and I would do what I had to do. I wanted a lawyer.

      Of course the dumbass is Missed 28 pounds of Primo mota. The best we picked up on the trip. By the time I got back to Texas and friends tried to retrieve it the RV people got suspicious and called the cops just as they were about to escape, With at least some cannabis.

      The bottom line they violated our fourth amendment rights. The Attorney General got her ass reamed out for it. And then the AG went on to ream the ass of four Memphis, task force officers, who were sitting on the front row and looked like they had their lunch money stolen.

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  4. What does Canadian girl have to say about this? 🤔



    RIP Gilbertona

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  5. Well all these arrests sure slowed down drugs. Lol

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  6. Easy why they get off. RCMP are compromised and owned by hells angels. There is reason why Canada is a haven for criminals

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    1. That sounds right. They are tied in with our australian networks and big circle too. And hells angels here too. They all work together.

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  7. Rico king is a confidential informant

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