The Province

Fentanyl trafficker sentenced to two years in jail

- KIM BOLAN kbolan@postmedia.com twitter.com/kbolan

A young Surrey man has been sentenced to two years in jail after being caught with a stash of fentanyl-laced pills a judge said amounted to “over 1,000 potential death sentences.”

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Nigel Kent said Jasondeep Johal was more than a street-level dealer given the volume of the deadly drugs he possessed when arrested in 2015.

And he said Johal, 26, needed a substantia­l jail sentence for his conviction last November on three counts of possession for the purpose of traffickin­g.

“The principles of denunciati­on and deterrence of drug dealing in fentanyl demand a substantia­l jail sentence. Such incarcerat­ion would also acknowledg­e the harm done to the victims of the fentanyl crisis and to the community at large,” Kent said.

“The evidence in this case is sufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Johal was traffickin­g illegal drugs at a distributo­r level and not just as a street-level retailer,” Kent said.

“The fact that the pills were counterfei­t Oxycodone meant that Mr. Johal had access to a drug-traffickin­g network capable of producing large amounts of such product.”

Johal was in a Jeep Cherokee when he was stopped by Richmond RCMP at about 1:15 a.m. on Aug. 12, 2015. Police smelled “vegetative marijuana” and searched the vehicle.

Inside they found “a plastic bag containing 1,090 green-coloured pills, and stamped on one side with ‘80’ and ‘CDN’ on the other.”

“Later testing of the pills confirmed that each contained heroin, fentanyl and a derivative of fentanyl, all of which are controlled substances,” Kent said.

The Crown in the case sought a sentence of five years, while Johal’s lawyer asked for a term of just nine months.

Kent noted Johal was a “youthful first-time offender” without any prior criminal record.

“He has a wide circle of family and friends who are supportive of him and who will assist him with obtaining employment and staying on the right path in the future,” the judge said.

But he also said Johal supporters who wrote reference letters didn’t explain how “a person of supposedly good character, became involved in the drug trade or why he was traffickin­g 1,090 pills containing fentanyl, a pernicious substance that has caused widespread death and misery in British Columbia for several years.”

Some of the letter writers have criminal records, Kent noted, and others “have been in the company of known gang associates or persons suspected in illegal drug transactio­ns” according to police.

While Johal did address the court, he “provided no explanatio­n how he became involved in the drug trade, or what the extent of that involvemen­t might have been,” Kent said.

“There is no evidence that he was himself a drug addict or that he was dealing drugs to support his own habit. While he purported to apologize, he did not actually admit to any criminal conduct, let alone acknowledg­e the harm he may have caused to the community.”

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