Pubdate: Thu, 22 May 2003 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2003 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Gordon Sinclair Jr. JUST A LITTLE WARNING BEFORE YOU TAKE OFF Jailed Winnipegger's Horror Story Not Unusual And now a clip-and-save column you should read before you take off to see the world. Since last Saturday's column, I've been hearing from people wanting to know where they can send donations to help a young Winnipeg man who's locked in a living hell. Joe Stone-Lamontagne is in a South American prison that could pass for Devil's Island if it was surrounded by water and sharks instead of partial fencing and helicopter gunships. I'll tell you how to help the family raise $70,000 to free their son, but first, you should understand that what happened to young Joe is far from unusual. What he did -- innocently or not -- was attempt to bring a briefcase back to North America from an airport in Ecuador. The briefcase didn't belong to him, and had half a kilo of cocaine hidden in its handle. Nearly three months later, Stone-Lamontagne is facing 25 years in a prison, which is a death sentence if you consider that he gets two bowls of rice a day, and sleeps on the floor of a cell built for two, but houses five. Not counting cockroaches. As I was saying, though, Joe's case isn't all that unusual. All you have to do is check out the Foreign Affairs Web site (www.voyage.gc.ca), where you'll receive the following warning. "Drug traffickers commonly prey on unsuspecting tourists, especially women, younger travellers and seniors. Be wary of the company you keep... you could be implicated by association." Try following the link marked: "True Confessions: Canadians Imprisoned Abroad." The true confessors are six anonymous Canadians who have done or are doing time in various countries for drug smuggling. Only one even approaches the maximum 25-year sentence this Joe from Winnipeg could get on conviction. Peter, a 35-year-old Canadian with no previous criminal record, got 15 years for importing 10 kilos of marijuana to Cuba. In fact, none of them had previous criminal records. That didn't surprise me. What did was that the other sentencings were wrist-slaps by comparison with Stone-Lamontagne. Take Lucie, a 34-year-old Montreal nurse and Henry, a 25-year-old unemployed electrician. He was convicted of importing hashish and got six months. She got 60 days for trafficking twice as much cocaine as Joe was caught with. Both of them were caught in Florida. Meanwhile, Peter was caught seven years ago, and still has eight years to serve. In his true confession on the Net, Peter talks about being fed bread and water initially. "The water was a milky colour and it really made me ill." Eventually, he got meat that made the water look like Perrier. It was infested with worms and bugs. "I still haven't learned how to deal with the bugs and rats that have infested my cell," Peter writes, "At night, they run all over me when I'm sleeping. It's... like something out of a horror movie." He concludes this way: "I can't tell you how unbearable my situation is. My family has suffered. I live with a broken heart every day. I wish I could turn back the clock and change things. No amount of money is worth this ordeal." The Foreign Affairs Web site also issues this warning for innocents like you who are travelling abroad. "Refuse to carry anything for anybody across a border or through customs." And then this for the guilty. "Don't be tempted to smuggle drugs to earn fast, easy cash. Any deal that sounds too good to be true is too good to be true." Joe's innocence or guilt has yet to be determined. But what's interesting is that that's exactly what Joe told his mother he's learned from the experience. "If it sounds too good to be true, it is." Obviously, he's learned something else being imprisoned in Ecuador. If it sounds too bad to be true, it is. And worse. If you care to make a donation to help Joe's defence, you have two choices. His father, Rick Lamontagne, has set up a trust fund for his son at the Polo Park CIBC. Or you can mail your donation directly to: Susan Stone 500 King Edward St. Winnipeg, R3J 1L8 - --- MAP posted-by: Tom