National Post (National Edition)
Cocaine trafficker subdued, police say
TORONTO • A sophisticated crime group that was allegedly smuggling bricks of pure cocaine across the U.S.-Canada border has been busted following a monthslong investigation, Toronto police said Monday.
Drug squad Insp. Don Belanger said the force, with the assistance of Canada Border Services Agency, has seized 61 kilograms of pure cocaine and arrested four men, while Canada-wide arrest warrants have been issued for two others.
“It is rare to seize this quantity of cocaine in a single investigation,” Belanger said. “Once ... diluted, dealers would have ultimately turned these 61 kilos of pure cocaine into a far greater quantity of lower grade cocaine mixed with any number of cheaper additives.”
Belanger said police launched the probe — dubbed Project Corredor — in the fall of 2019 when they received information that a group of men based in Toronto were smuggling cocaine across an unnamed land-border crossing.
Once in Ontario, the cocaine would be stashed in condominiums and houses then distributed to mid-level dealers who in turn would dish it out to street-level dealers, Belanger said.
“It is our belief that collectively this crime group has the capacity to make millions in profits off the sale of cocaine,” he said.
Beginning in January, drug squad investigators began raiding homes as they executed search warrants, Belanger said. They seized 61 one-kilogram bricks of cocaine — 20 bricks inside locked boxes in one condominium in North York, 36 bricks in another condo nearby, and five more at another house in a residential neighbourhood.
He said officers also seized $210,000, US$14,000, and 30,000 euros along with four vehicles and a “significant quantity of luxury jewelry.”
“The amount of cocaine and cash seized in this investigation speaks to the level of sophistication of this group,” Belanger said.
“They are not street-level, or mid-level drug dealers, we allege they are highly organized and for a lack of a better term, professional cocaine distributors.”
Belanger said the force believes the group has links to a Mexican cartel.
“The extent of the link to a cartel continues to be a focus of the investigation,” Belanger told The Canadian Press.