Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Jeff Lee, PLEA BARGAINING COSTS POT TRAFFICKER HIS 'TOYS' A Surrey drug trafficker with a penchant for expensive toys -- from fast boats and cars to vacation property -- has forfeited more than $1 million in assets as part of a deal in return for a three-year term in federal prison. The only items Glen Cuthbert Finch, 52, and his wife, Shelley Quesnel, will be allowed to keep are their family home on 23nd Avenue in Surrey, her sport utility vehicle and some cameras and artwork they acquired before Finch began transporting marijuana, according to RCMP. But gone will be the expensive lakefront house in Osoyoos, a 1999 Porsche 911, a 1992 Softail Harley-Davidson, three speedboats, an Abbotsford airplane hangar, jewellery, furniture, two all-terrain vehicles and $50,000 US cash. Also gone will be the kit airplane police say Finch used to regularly fly bales of marijuana into the United States as far south as Oregon. Finch's border-hopping activities came to the attention of police during investigations into lucrative marijuana transport operations, according to Constable Bob Seguin of the RCMP's Integrated Proceeds of Crime unit. Last August, while working with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, police began surveillance on Finch, whom Seguin described as a "freelance" transporter. On the day they arrested him, they caught him at his Abbotsford hangar loading 15 kilograms of pot into his plane from the Porsche. On Friday, seven months after police unveiled the seized items for the media, Finch and his lawyers concluded a deal in which he agreed to plead guilty to possession of the proceeds of crime, possession for the purpose of trafficking in marijuana and breach of bail conditions. He was sentenced in Surrey provincial court to three years concurrently on the first two charges, and time served for the breach of bail. The size of the forfeiture surprised police, who noted the items amounted to more than $1 million in illegally obtained items. "He certainly liked his toys," Seguin said. "All of them will now go to Crown assets for disposal." Unlike police forces in the United States, the RCMP won't get a share of the proceeds. The money all goes into the government's general revenue. Police don't know how much pot Finch moved, or how long he was in the business. Although he had no criminal record in Canada prior to his arrest last fall, he does have a criminal record in the United States for drug-related charges, Seguin said. Finch's lawyer, Kevin Filkow of Peck and Company, said his client cooperated fully with the RCMP on the proceeds of crime charges, and wasn't accused of peddling hard drugs or using violence or weapons. Seguin said Finch wouldn't provide any information about his sources or customers, but police are still investigating links they found during the seizures. "His customers were not known to us, and we did not get any information about his suppliers," Seguin said. "Like any franchise industry, people are connected, and we're continuing to investigate other avenues." Reached at her home Tuesday, Quesnel said she and her common-law husband just "want to put some closure to this now." She said she was embarrassed by the previous media interest and didn't want to comment on the plea bargain. Finch's problems may not be over. The Canada Customs and Revenue Agency is investigating how Finch came by the seized items and he remains exposed to tax liabilities, one of his lawyers said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens