The Province

Canadian who worked with El Chapo jailed

Cocaine smuggler known as Russian Mike sentenced to 15 years in U.S. prison

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

A Canadian cocaine smuggler who worked with the leader of Mexico's notorious Sinaloa cartel has been sentenced to 15 years in a U.S. prison after pleading guilty last December.

Mykhaylo Koretskyy, alias Russian Mike, was handed the sentence in a New York courtroom last month by U.S. District Court Judge Paul A. Crotty.

U.S. court documents obtained by Postmedia say that Koretskyy, 46, travelled to Mazatlan to meet Sinaloa boss Joaquín (El Chapo) Guzman in March 2013.

“They discussed the price of cocaine in Canada, how the defendant could transport cocaine for the cartel through Canada, and how much money the defendant would be paid,” a sentencing memo filed by the U.S. Attorney said. “The defendant then participat­ed in at least three loads of cocaine with the cartel.”

Koretskyy worked in the drug trade with former B.C. resident Ryan Wedding, who has been a fugitive since being charged in 2015 after a major RCMP investigat­ion dubbed Operation Harrington. Also charged in Operation Harrington was former Vancouver resident Philipos Kollaros, who was later shot to death in Montreal in 2018. Another associate identified in the Canadian drug probe, Jahanbakhs­h Meshkati, died in a targeted shooting in Burnaby in August 2014.

Identified as Guzman's main Canadian contact in the U.S. documents is Stephen Tello, a former Toronto real estate agent convicted of importing cocaine in the Harrington case in 2019 and sentenced to 15 years.

The sentencing memo filed in the U.S. case by Koretskyy said he only got mixed up with smuggling cocaine because “his business had fallen into arrears, and he had borrowed a large amount of money” from a man only identified as Sergei.

“When Sergei demanded repayment and Mr. Koretskyy did not have the money, Sergei demanded he participat­e in the instant conspiracy,” the memo said.

He said Sergei introduced him to Tello, who was supposed to accompany Koretskky to Mexico to meet Sinaloa contacts back in 2013.

But Tello missed his flight and Koretskyy “ended up travelling alone to meet with the most powerful drug cartel in the entire world,” his memo said.

Koretskyy said he was “transporte­d blindfolde­d an hour and a half into the Sinaloan countrysid­e to a warehouse to meet Alex Cifuentes, El Chapo's right-hand man.”

“Mr. Koretskyy was surrounded by over 40 men armed with rifles and asked

by Alex if he knew who El Chapo and the Sinaloa Cartel were. Mr. Koretskyy answered no and the men laughed. Alex showed him news articles on a tablet and it dawned on Mr. Koretskyy how deeply his desperatio­n had taken him.

“After a brief discussion of the cartel's plans for Canada, he was given a BlackBerry to coordinate and flown back to Canada.”

But the U.S. Attorney said that Koretskyy is minimizing his role in drug smuggling, when in reality he “helped Chapo and the Sinaloa Cartel expand its reach through the United States north to the fertile Canadian market.

“In the process, he distribute­d and conspired to distribute hundreds of kilograms of cocaine, enough individual doses of poison to destroy countless families and communitie­s.”

The memo noted that Koretskyy “describes only part of the (Mexican) trip, admitting that he met with Alex Cifuentes but failing to acknowledg­e that he also met with Chapo.” And it said the Canadian's claim that it was Sergei who got him involved doesn't ring true.

“Incredulou­sly, he claims that he had no prior involvemen­t in the cocaine trade before flying down to Mexico to meet with the leaders of the largest and most violent cocaine distributi­on organizati­on in the world, and goes so far as to claim that he did not even recognize Chapo's name before this meeting. This defies common sense.”

In 2011, El Chapo “sought to expand his narcotics traffickin­g operation in Canada because the price per kilogram of cocaine was higher in Canada than in the United States,” the U.S. document said.

Guzman was convicted in the U.S. and given a life sentence in 2019.

 ?? — ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Drug kingpin Joaquin (El Chapo) Guzman is escorted into a helicopter at Mexico City's airport recapture during an intense military operation in Los Mochis, in Sinaloa State. in 2016 following his
— ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Drug kingpin Joaquin (El Chapo) Guzman is escorted into a helicopter at Mexico City's airport recapture during an intense military operation in Los Mochis, in Sinaloa State. in 2016 following his

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