Pubdate: Thu, 31 Aug 2006 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Paula McCooey, The Ottawa Citizen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) FOUR SENTENCED IN KILLING OF B.C. DRUG MULE Man collapsed outside bus depot after beating over missing cocaine Four men admitted yesterday in court to their role in the death of British Columbia native Graeme Ferguson, a 27-year-old hired as a drug mule to transport 17 kilograms of pure Colombian cocaine to Ottawa. Guy Wilson, 38, and Kym Tessier, 20, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and were sentenced to 10 years in prison. Lafleche Boucher, 21, pleaded guilty to forcible confinement, extortion and robbery and was sentenced to 48 months for his role in the abduction of Mr. Ferguson who was held and beaten in a Montreal warehouse for five days. A fourth person, Michel Lemarbre, 20, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to five years in a federal penitentiary. All four were ordered to provide a DNA sample and are under a 10-year weapons prohibition. Court heard that Mr. Ferguson, a Delta, B.C., security guard with no criminal record, was taken to a dark warehouse on July 14, 2005 over a botched delivery. He was stripped to his underwear, placed in a chair, chained by the ankles to an anchor mount on the floor, beaten and had a gun put to his head. An agreed statement of facts read out in court said the purpose of the beating was to get Mr. Ferguson to turn over the cocaine. The men did not believe his story -- that the drugs had been lost at the bus station on Catherine Street -- or his concern that he was being watched by police. When they were finally convinced, Robin Cote, 40, Mr. Tessier's father, and Mr. Wilson returned to the bus station on July 19, 2005, and waited outside while Mr. Ferguson picked up a suitcase containing drugs from the lost luggage depot. The drugs had an estimated street value of $3.5 million . Shortly afterwards, Mr. Ferguson walked out of the bus station and collapsed. Barely conscious, he told paramedics he had been assaulted. Then he fell unconscious. He was declared dead on arrival at the Ottawa Hospital Civic campus. Ottawa police major crime investigators travelled to B.C. and learned from Mr. Ferguson's girlfriend that he had made two trips to Ottawa from Vancouver. He was paid $3,000 cash for one trip and was to be paid $12,000 for the trip that ended in his death. When Mr. Ferguson arrived in Ottawa that second time, he saw police around the station, walked away from his suitcases and returned to B.C. He returned to Ottawa because he was worried about the failed delivery and was being pressured to return the suitcases. As it turned out, police were never on to him. Justice Ann Alder said she agreed with the joint sentence and considered the fact that Mr. Wilson, Mr. Tessier and Mr. Boucher, by pleading guilty, showed "some level of acknowledgement and responsibility and some level of remorse." She said it is clear the beating was planned. "You don't happen to have a warehouse equipped to torture people. This was all about greed, all about drugs," she said. "It suffices to say there was a horrendous amount of brutality. I can't imagine the fear or pain" endured by Mr. Ferguson. Mr. Ferguson's mother, Marlyn Ferguson, tearfully read a victim impact statement before Judge Alder sentenced the men. She described how the Delta police went to her husband's, Ian, workplace on July 20, 2005, to tell him his son was killed. She said he told the officer it must have been a mistake because his son was not in Ottawa. "We feel loneliness, knowing we will never see our son again," said Mrs. Ferguson. "Never see his beautiful smile and feel his kindness." Mr. Cote is still wanted by police. Paul Layoun, 27, is also wanted in connection with Mr. Ferguson's death. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 613-233-TIPS or Ottawa police at 613-236-1222. Outside the courtroom, Mrs. Ferguson said her family is satisfied with the outcome of the case, and grateful to Ottawa police and the Crown's office. "Our son, Graeme, made a terrible mistake and paid the ultimate price," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake