Truro News

Regina man accused of helping to smuggle Nigerians across Canada-u.s. border

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A man who pleaded guilty in the United States for his part in a human smuggling operation has been arrested and charged in Canada.

RCMP say Victor Omoruyi of Regina was picked up at the Saskatoon Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday.

He was deported from the U.S. where he pleaded guilty in a North Dakota district court last spring to transporti­ng an illegal alien. He was sentenced in August to six months in jail.

Police say he is charged under the Immigratio­n and Refugee Protection Act with one count of human smuggling and one count of aiding or abetting.

They say the charges are in relation to an investigat­ion into nine Nigerian citizens and asylumseek­ers who were intercepte­d while crossing into Canada from North Dakota last April.

Omoruyi’s wife, Michelle Omoruyi, also faces charges of human smuggling and conspiracy to commit human smuggling.

Court documents signed by border agents say Victor Omoruyi was arrested April 14 after an SUV was stopped south of the North Dakota-saskatchew­an border.

The documents say Omoruyi entered the U.S. that afternoon and told border officers he was going to meet friends and shop in Minot N.D. He said he planned to return to Canada the next day.

They say authoritie­s started watching him because they allege he was identified “as a human smuggler that has previously provided transporta­tion ... for individual­s who have then entered into Canada illegally.”

The affidavit details how border agents followed Omoruyi for several hours.

At one point, five adults and four children left a hotel and got into Omoruyi’s vehicle, the documents say.

The SUV stopped for gas before heading north toward the border, at which point a U.S. border agent called the RCMP.

The documents say photos of Omoruyi, his vehicle and his passengers were captured by border patrol surveillan­ce cameras in an area of open farm fields near the border.

The documents say an RCMP officer saw the nine passengers walk north, through an open field, to Canada and make it to a vehicle waiting to pick them up.

Authoritie­s say the SUV then met with a sedan before officers stopped the SUV and arrested Omoruyi, along with another Canadian and a Nigerian citizen.

The Canadian is identified as a woman named Tosin Johnson, who was born in Nigeria. The Nigerian citizen is a man named Success Okundia. They were both charged by U.S. authoritie­s with illegal entry.

Michelle Omoruyi was also charged last spring.

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