Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jan 2006 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Carmela Fragomeni Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) LIFE SENTENCE FOR 'DESPICABLE' COCAINE KINGPIN Cocaine kingpin Alfredo Malanca was called "a purveyor of misery" and "despicable" before being sentenced to life imprisonment for smuggling more than a quarter tonne of cocaine into Canada. Superior Court Justice Gordon Thomson, in sentencing Malanca, 33, in a Hamilton courtroom yesterday, spoke first of the devastating effect of the cocaine on society, causing misery, suffering and degradation to users and destruction, crime and violence in society as users turn to crime to support their habit and street gang dealers kill each other in turf wars. "It's clear you have no feelings of any kind for anyone, and in particular the end users (of cocaine) and their misery or the public as victims ... you do not appear to have any conscience," Thomson told the Bolton man. Prosecutor Tom Andreopoulos said the life imprisonment sentence is rare in drug cases, but that Thomson was sending a message that the quantity of cocaine seized and gravity of its impact, if it had hit the streets, needed nothing less. It means the earliest Malanca can be eligible for parole is in seven years, he said. Malanca was convicted by a Hamilton jury in October of importing 272 kilograms of cocaine and also of conspiring with others to importing it. He had no previous criminal record. Drugs were flown in from Jamaica in a chartered jet, but were seized by RCMP on Nov. 7, 2001, at Lake Simcoe Regional Airport in Oro Medonte, north of Barrie. Court heard the drugs would have cost $6 million in Jamaica, but had an ultimate street value of $26.9 million. The pilot, two passengers and three men on the ground were arrested at the scene. Malanca was arrested in July 2002 with two dozen others who were charged with a much wider conspiracy to import and distribute about $95 million in cocaine, hashish and marijuana imported from Panama, Chile, Colombia and the Caribbean. Malanca is described as one of three kingpins in a drug smuggling and trafficking network operating in Halifax, Montreal, Hamilton and Toronto. Although Malanca was not at the Lake Simcoe airport when the 272 kilograms were smuggled in, Thomson said he had no doubt Malanca was behind it. And despite the defence suggesting one of those arrested at the airport, Dean Roberts of Montreal, was the boss and key player, Thomson said Malanca was the boss who had others do the dirty work for him as he sat comfortably in Toronto. "I am satisfied you are in the top echelon of the cocaine business." The sentence evoked sobs and anger from Malanca's family and relatives in the courtroom, and temporarily put nerves on edge when one of them angrily stormed out of the courtroom as Thomson gave out the sentence. RCMP investigators who worked for three years on Project Olco, which began with a tip to the Mounties' Hamilton drug section, were happy to see Malanca sent away for so long. Corporal Brian Reed said it was a fitting and rightfully deserved sentence. Thomson said the public doesn't normally learn the names of those at the top, but want to know the courts will do their best to deter drug lords. Thomson said Malanca led a double life, one as a legitimate young businessman and the other secretly, as a sophisticated cocaine importer. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom