The Niagara Falls Review

BREACH OF TRUST

Former high-ranking RCMP officer sentenced to 10 years in prison for cocaine theft and traffickin­g //

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

HALIFAX — A judge sentenced a former high-ranking RCMP officer to 10 years in prison for stealing and selling $300,000 worth of cocaine Thursday, saying the egregious breach of trust compromise­d the national police and resulted in a “remarkable fall from grace.”

Justice James Chipman said 51-year-old retired staff Sgt. Craig Robert Burnett’s corruption led him to exploit “the very law he was sworn to uphold.”

“Rather than acting according to the core values of the RCMP, he behaved dishonestl­y when he manipulate­d the system to covertly steal approximat­ely 10 kilograms of cocaine.”

Burnett, former commander of an RCMP National Port Enforcemen­t Team, stole the highly addictive drug from RCMP headquarte­rs in Halifax in 2011, and replaced it with another substance.

The cocaine was part of a 200kilogra­m shipment police had seized from a ship that had arrived at the city’s historic port.

“I am of the view that Mr. Burnett’s moral responsibi­lity is heightened as he decided to ignore the criminalit­y of what he did,” the Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge told a packed but silent courtroom. “He made a conscious choice to steal the cocaine for financial gain.”

As well, Chipman noted that when Burnett discovered he was under investigat­ion in 2016, he used his police training to subvert the investigat­ion.

However, the judge said the former police officer should serve his sentence in a minimum security prison because his safety would be put at risk in a mediumor high-security institutio­n.

Burnett, a 20-year veteran of the force, was arrested soon after he retired in 2016.

During a 21-day trial earlier this year, court heard the divorced father of two gave the cocaine to a lifelong friend and reputable Nova Scotia businesspe­rson, Scott Rowlings, in 2011.

Rowlings then gave the drug to a third man, Mike Kanasevich, who sold it within three months to his “undergroun­d” connection­s for roughly $300,000. The three men split the proceeds three ways in 2012, with Burnett collecting about $100,000 in cash.

In 2014, Kanasevich — a known drug dealer who had a falling out with the other men — approached the RCMP, telling them he had informatio­n regarding “a dirty police officer.”

Over the next two years, the Mounties rolled out “Operation Handshake,” an undercover mission that eventually included both Kanasevich and Rowlings as informants.

During his trial, Burnett maintained his innocence, telling the court it would have been impossible for him to steal the cocaine from the RCMP’s evidence lockers. In April, Burnett was convicted of theft over $5,000, traffickin­g cocaine, laundering the proceeds of crime, obstructin­g police, fabricatin­g evidence and breach of trust.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Craig Robert Burnett received 10 years in a minimum security prison.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Craig Robert Burnett received 10 years in a minimum security prison.

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