Times Colonist

Speeding car leads to drugs and alleged pot advocate

- JEFF BELL jwbell@timescolon­ist.com

The driver of a car stopped for speeding near Swartz Bay ferry terminal had a large quantity of illicit drugs in his trunk and business cards advertisin­g the sale of marijuana that included a web address and an offer of home delivery, police say.

Const. Drew Hildred of the Capital Regional District’s Integrated Road Safety Unit was doing speed enforcemen­t just after 8 a.m. Tuesday on the approach to the terminal — where the limit is 50 kilometres an hour — and clocked an early-1990s Lexus at 87 km/h.

He said when he pulled the car over to issue a $196 ticket, he noticed what seemed to be a smell of marijuana but couldn’t be absolutely sure where it was coming from. After turning away momentaril­y to write the ticket, he was satisfied when he returned that a marijuana smell was coming from the car.

He arrested the driver on suspicion of possessing the drug.

“He admitted to smoking marijuana in the vehicle earlier. However, the smell that I smelled was more than what he admitted to,” Hildred said.

A search of the car’s trunk turned up about 20 pounds of marijuana in half-pound bags, worth from $80,000 to $100,000, along with 65 grams of a strong marijuana derivative known as shatter, valued at about $6,000, and 28 grams of hashish.

About $3,500 in cash and a digital scale were also found.

Hildred said that the driver “definitely felt that what he was doing was OK.”

Police do not know the destinatio­n for the drugs, although the driver did say he was headed to Vancouver to gamble at a casino.

“In my personal experience I’ve stopped people for unrelated matters with drugs on them, but never something of this magnitude,” Hildred said at a news conference Thursday, where the seized drugs were displayed.

Integrated Road Safety Unit Cpl. Ryan Bacica said the drugs were vacuum-sealed and covered in a number of bags in an attempt to conceal the odour. They were found inside two plastic containers and a duffle bag.

Bacica said the driver is “a self-admitted advocate for marijuana use,” and was “cavalier” at the time of the arrest, wanting to talk about his views on marijuana.

Const. Kerry Whitbread, a drug-recognitio­n expert, said it is “not uncommon” for large amounts of marijuana to be moved on area streets. But finding shatter is a concern because it is about 16 times more potent than regular bud marijuana, he said. “Shatter’s probably been around for a couple of years now but definitely is gaining popularity.”

A 28-year-old Saanich resident was released from custody and is to appear in court on a charge of possession of a controlled substance for the purpose of traffickin­g.

 ??  ?? RCMP Const. Kerry Whitbread, left, and Saanich Police Const. Drew Hildred with bags seized in a drug bust near Swartz Bay.
RCMP Const. Kerry Whitbread, left, and Saanich Police Const. Drew Hildred with bags seized in a drug bust near Swartz Bay.

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