Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 2004 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Dan Arsenault, Crime Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) MOSER RIVER DRUG SUSPECTS 'LITTLE ODD' AS NEIGHBOURS Guard Dogs, Zodiac Often at Sea Had People Asking: What's Going On? Eileen Maldeis says it didn't take long for her to notice something strange about the man she sold a house to in her hometown Moser River, near an $18-million offshore cocaine seizure this week. Ms. Maldeis sold the white bungalow at 28534 Highway 7 for her daughter Melody Berlyn, who moved to Australia. The buyer didn't like the propane stove, Ms. Maldeis said in an interview Friday. The problem was that he would have needed to open an account with a propane supplier, which he didn't want to do. "He said, 'I pay for everything by cash, I don't write cheques.'" She sold the house, through a real estate agent, in the fall of 2000, but the stove didn't stay. "Eventually, the propane tanks were removed, I could see that they were beside the house." Sgt. Wayne Noonan, spokesman for the RCMP in Nova Scotia, said the man who bought the house is not involved in the drug conspiracy. The Chronicle Herald isn't divulging his name for legal reasons. The RCMP, Canadian Coast Guard, a navy warship and several other agencies took part in the drug bust that centred on the 15-metre yacht FriendShip off the Eastern Shore on Monday night. Police arrested nine people from three countries and seized more than 500 kilograms of cocaine. They also executed a search warrant at the Moser River house, which an RCMP release said was to be used to "conceal the drug prior to distribution." Before the sale, Ms. Maldeis said the house was on the market for six months with a price of about $80,000. That is higher than normal for the area, she said, attributing that to its waterfrontage. "There were a couple of other people interested, but this particular person seemed very interested." The man started with a low offer but slowly rose to the asking price. "He came up to the amount I wanted," she said. "They kept coming up to meet the price. That seemed a little strange." "It was (the) waterfrontage - that's what sold it." She said the agreement of purchase and sale was in the name of the buyer's daughter. Ms. Maldeis said the buyer was "a very agreeable person, pleasant." Sometimes he sold her meat pies that she said were delicious. He told her he'd be away from Moser River for long periods because he was a chef at a Canadian mountain resort. A young man and woman, who looked to be in their early 20s, stayed at the house but kept to themselves most of the time, Ms. Maldeis said. Some of Ms. Maldeis's relatives lived near the house, which is on the western edge of Moser River. They often noticed ATVs going down to the water and spotted the neighbours' Zodiac going out to sea. They found the couple living in the house friendly, but once asked them to control their dogs, which made them nervous. "They were guard dogs. They were not your ordinary friendly little Lab," Ms. Maldeis said. After Monday's arrests, she said she remembered something else about the property. "I thought, my God, that basement was a great place for storage." She said previous owners built extensions on the house, each time adding a new, partially separate basement compartment. "There was one place in particular, maybe two, where you could, you know, store stuff." The occupants of the house were seen in town on occasion, sometimes doing odd jobs like painting. Still, Ms. Maldeis felt they didn't fit the mould of newcomers to the area who normally are retirees or vacationers. "These people didn't fit into that category. It was a little odd. "Many people in the village wondered, what the devil are they doing here, what's going on down there?" Sgt. Noonan said the drug bust remains under investigation, adding the RCMP could place a restraining order on the house or even seek forfeiture on it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake