Medicine Hat News

Largest meth bust in city history

Two charged after police seize 1.02 kg of methamphet­amines, nearly as much as was seized in all of 2016

- PEGGY REVELL prevell@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: MHNprevell

Working with fellow law enforcemen­t across southern Alberta, local police have arrested two people and seized more than a kilogram of methamphet­amine.

“This is the largest one-time seizure we’ve had in Medicine Hat in our history,” said ALERT Medicine Hat’s S-Sgt. Cory Both on the arrest made by the city’s organized crime team in the early-morning hours of Dec. 8, when a planned vehicle stop was initiated just inside city limits on Highway 3.

In the trunk of the rental vehicle, investigat­ors found 1.02 kilograms of meth and 226 grams of cocaine, worth an estimated $125,000.

The driver of the vehicle — 47-year-old Shonna Scriven of Medicine Hat — was charged with two counts of possession for the purpose of traffickin­g and possessing the proceeds of crime. She remains in custody, with her first court appearance set for Dec. 14.

Simultaneo­usly arrested in Lethbridge was 28-year-old Michael Abate, who was charged with drug traffickin­g and possession of proceeds of crime. He remains in custody and is due in Lethbridge court on Dec. 13.

Police believe the drugs were being transporte­d into the city by way of Lethbridge, and was meant to supply Medicine Hat and the immediate area.

“This (kilo) is 36 ounces, so this is wholesale quantities. We’re dealing with dealers who deal to dealers here. They’re up the food chain quite a ways,” said Both, adding that the average lower-level dealer possesses one to three ounces on average, while users usually purchase one to 3.5 grams.

“In every gram there’s approximat­ely 20 doses of methamphet­amine ... So when you’re talking about a kilo seizure, you’re talking about 20,000 doses taken off the street.”

It’s a “little more rare” to make arrests for higher-ups in the drug-dealing chain, said Both. “It certainly takes a little more effort to get there.”

But he credited community members in providing good informatio­n, and the investigat­ors who got “into the ground level of this group to navigate their way up the food chain, to get up to the second or third tier of a drug-traffickin­g syndicate and actually seize wholesale quantities of the drug.”

The seizure shows the growing methamphet­amine problem within the community, police say. Last year in its entirety, MHPS seized 1.47 kilograms — up 300 per cent from 2015. To date in 2017, ALERT has seized 3.25 kilograms of methamphet­amine.

“In this one seizure we’ve seized almost as much as we did the whole year last year. This year the count is almost one third of our total seizures this year,” said Both.

Both estimates this supplier was one of three or four main groups moving meth through the city.

“Taking him out of the picture is huge, it makes a significan­t dent in the methamphet­amine supply chain, but there’s still others we’ll contend with,” said Both, explaining that arresting dealers at any level creates a vacuum others will fill up.

“We just have to be diligent in our enforcemen­t and investigat­ions, and continue to keep these guys in check,” he said, adding that police can’t solve the methamphet­amine problem alone, but there needs to be a holistic approach that involves a “broad spectrum of social interventi­on and prevention strategies.”

While not wanting to minimize the opioid and fentanyl crisis, Both said meth is “hands down our single biggest community risk factor.”

“Methamphet­amine is the single biggest contributi­ng factor to the rise in break and enter, property-related crimes, stolen vehicles, an increase in firearms-related offences ... it’s a huge problem here.”

And forget TV shows like Breaking Bad — Both said the meth is coming from outside the country in bulk quantities and high quality, where there’s the capacity to make it in industrial­sized laboratori­es, then going through the typical contraband supply line like other drugs.

It’s not that smaller DIY meth labs don’t exist, he said. “But we’re not seeing that here ... only because it’s no longer economical for these smaller independen­t labs to be doing it.”

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? S-Sgt. Cory Both holds up more than a kilogram of meth seized from an arrest on Dec. 8 by ALERT as part of an investigat­ion which led to the city’s largest meth seizure ever.
SUBMITTED PHOTO S-Sgt. Cory Both holds up more than a kilogram of meth seized from an arrest on Dec. 8 by ALERT as part of an investigat­ion which led to the city’s largest meth seizure ever.

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