Pubdate: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Ross Marowits, Canadian Press CANADIAN POLICE BUST MAJOR QUEBEC DRUG EXPORTING OPERATION TO U.S. MONTREAL - RCMP in Quebec believe they have busted a lucrative drug business in one of Canada's main corridors for exportation of marijuana to the United States. Twenty-six people face charges following raids Wednesday at several properties in the Eastern Townships, the south shore of Montreal and Toronto. Among them was suspected ringleader Marc-Andre Cusson of Sutton, Que., along with one relative of a full-fledged member of the Hells Angels biker gang. Canadian police continued to search Thursday for three other men, including a U.S. citizen. Nine people arrested during Wednesday's raids were released without charges. After monitoring Cusson for a year, police charged the self-employed businessman with conspiracy, commission of an offence for a criminal organization and instructing commission of an offence for criminal organization. This operation differed from past ones because it netted one of the suspected organizers of a drug-exportation business, said Insp. Jacques Tanguay, the RCMP's commanding officer in southeastern Quebec. "We have totally destroyed a network that produces, sells and also exports this cannabis to the United States where they have developed a thriving market," Tanguay said at the Mounties' headquarters in Montreal. Police searched 40 properties and seized properties, vehicles, boats, a tractor, a truck, $160,000 in large denominations, explosives and 60 kilograms of marijuana. The RCMP said the largely hydroponic operation sent up to 225 kilograms of cannabis to New England states each week, netting tens of millions of dollars annually. Scouts recruited sympathetic independent truckers who would transport the drugs during runs to border states like Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire. Each trucker could earn nearly $100 per kilogram of cannabis transported across the border, said Cpl. Roger Caron, head of the RCMP drug investigation in Granby., Que. The money would then be returned to Canada for laundering. One destination was supposed to be an Algerian cigarette-exporting business in Oakville, Ont., just west of Toronto, police said. The business hadn't yet started. Its owner was arrested but has not yet been charged. More than 300 officers have been involved in Operation Hearse since it began in the fall of 2000. Working with American officials, police have intervened on several occasions to seize a total of nearly 450 kilograms of pot and about $1.2 million US. Police said they were alerted to the illegal business by Quebec residents who began to question lavish spending by those with little employment. "They get a little disturbed when you get dozens of kids with $50,000 vehicles driving around at 20 years old," Caron said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth