The News (New Glasgow)

Sailboat cocaine case delayed again

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HALIFAX — The sentencing of a sailboat captain who smuggled drugs into Nova Scotia from a small Caribbean island has been delayed yet again - this time for the Crown to call an expert witness.

Federal Crown lawyer Glen Scheuer said Thursday the witness will provide the court with expert opinion on criminal organizati­ons and the importatio­n of controlled substances like cocaine.

“We feel that it would be a benefit to the court to hear the evidence of this expert in terms of making its findings in relation to this matter,” he said outside the courtroom. Jacques John Grenier of Hubbards, N.S., stashed 250 kilograms of cocaine in a secret compartmen­t of his eight-metre boat Quesera and sailed into a marina west of Halifax under cover of darkness last September. Officers with the Canada Border Services Agency found several bricks of cocaine hidden beneath a sealed bed frame in the forward sleeping quarters of the Canadian-registered vessel, which had travelled from

Saint Martin in the northeast Caribbean Sea.

The sailor was charged with possession of cocaine for the purpose of traffickin­g, importing cocaine and conspiracy to import cocaine. He pleaded guilty to the first two charges last November and the third charge was to be dealt with at the sentencing hearing.

The case has been delayed several times in recent months. At one point, Grenier sought the help of another lawyer. As well, more time was needed to allow him to recover from some form of surgery.

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