The Peterborough Examiner

300-plus charges laid in traffickin­g probe

Operation was allegedly run by a single ‘kingpin’ and involved three of his brothers in high positions: police

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

Dozens of women suffered “horrific” acts at the hands of a human traffickin­g ring that operated across the country, police north of Toronto said Wednesday as they announced more than 30 arrests in the case.

The operation was allegedly run by a single “kingpin” and involved three of his brothers in high positions, Insp. Thai Truong of the York Regional Police said.

It operated for more than a year and had contact with dozens of women over that time, Truong alleged, adding that those caught in its web are the true focus.

“To the naked eye it may appear that these females that are involved in the sex trade are willing participan­ts,” Truong said at a news conference. “They may smile at you, they may not even appear to be controlled or victimized.”

But, he added, police “have seen the horrific things that are happening to these women. They’re controlled in every way imaginable.”

Truong alleged the organizati­on focused on human traffickin­g, but also dabbled in fraud, drug traffickin­g and other illegal activities.

Police have arrested 31 people in connection with its operations and they face more than 300 charges between them, he said, noting investigat­ors are still looking for 11 more suspects.

He said the investigat­ion began a year ago when two women attempting to escape control of the alleged ringleader, Jonathan Nyangwila, reached out to officers from a hotel in Vaughan, Ont.

Truong did not specify exactly how long the group had been in operation, but said it’s been recruiting women for several years. Many of those women, he said, are sex-trade workers in Quebec and range in age from their early 20s to their mid 30s.

Once involved, the women were shuffled west to Ontario and other Canadian provinces, where they were controlled by means including physical violence, emotional manipulati­on, drugs and alcohol, Truong alleged.

He said the women were forced to work constantly, allegedly bringing in what he called a conservati­ve average of $1,000 a day for the organizati­on.

The investigat­ion into the group’s activities, dubbed Project Coalesce, identified 45 women believed to be in contact with the organizati­on over the past year, Truong said. The current raft of charges relate to just 12 of them.

Truong said the alleged ring was more structured and tightknit than many other similar operations across the country, suggesting the group was unique in the force’s experience.

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