Pubdate: Fri, 13 Oct 2006 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsor/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Doug Schmidt,Windsor Star Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials SENIORS, KIDS MOVED DRUGS Joint RCMP-DEA Effort Smashes Ring That Brought Ecstasy Tablets Across Border A smuggling ring that used minors and senior citizens as drug mules to ferry large quantities of methamphetamine-laced ecstasy tablets from Toronto via the Windsor-Detroit tunnel into Michigan was busted up by police in a series of raids this week on both sides of the border. Members of the RCMP drug section in Windsor executed search warrants at two residences in Windsor and Tecumseh Wednesday and arrested 10 people. An additional arrest was made Thursday morning, bringing to 13 the number of locals among 25 individuals charged as a result of a six-month joint investigation led by the RCMP and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and including the Canada Border Services Agency and the Sterling Heights police department. Two of the Canadians charged, brothers [Name redacted] and [Name redacted] , are in jail in Windsor and Ohio, respectively, for unrelated offences. Law enforcement officials seized about 55,000 ecstasy tablets with an estimated street value of more than $1 million. Const. Annette Bernardon of the Windsor RCMP said the drugs originated in Toronto, with Windsor-area individuals holding the shipments until arrangements could be made to hire couriers to transfer them across the border. "Every case is important, but this case was especially important -- it showed the co-operation between the RCMP and the DEA," said Special Agent Carolyn Gibson of the DEA's Detroit field office. "The message to the drug dealers ... is that there are no borders (when it comes to) ridding our streets of these drugs," she said. Among those facing conspiracy and trafficking charges are [Name redacted] , 51, his wife [Name redacted] , 44, and their sons [Name redacted] , 29, [Name redacted] , 24, and [Name redacted] , 21. During the period covered by the police investigation, which relied heavily on electronically intercepted telephone conversations, [Name redacted] was incarcerated at Windsor Jail pending his sentencing on unrelated drugs and weapons smuggling charges. "I was aware of the ongoing investigation involving Mr. Odish during his sentencing hearing," said federal Crown attorney Richard Pollock. Other local residents facing a raft of drug conspiracy, trafficking and export charges are: [Name redacted] , 19,[Name redacted] , 21, [Name redacted] , 19, [Name redacted] , 30, [Name redacted] , 22, [Name redacted] , 19, [Name redacted] , 21, and [Name redacted] , 18, all of Windsor. [Name redacted] is also charged with conspiracy to traffic in firearms and trafficking in marijuana, while he and his brother [Name redacted] are among several additionally charged with uttering threats. Three men from the Toronto area and nine Metro Detroit residents are also charged. In one transaction, described in a criminal complaint sworn by a DEA agent in U.S. District Court, a Michigan-based drug trafficker placed an order for 20,000 ecstasy tablets with her Toronto supplier who had it brought to Windsor July 14 by a courier on a train. The next day, RCMP surveillance officers observed the Canadian mule enter a room at the ABC Motel and two males subsequently exit the room and get into a Michigan-plated vehicle previously observed by the drug squad. A subsequent search by U.S. border patrol officers at the tunnel revealed more than 19,000 ecstasy tablets duct-taped to the legs of the two suspects. The agent's court affidavit details other similar alleged transactions arranged by phone and overheard by RCMP officers, including a meeting by two Detroit men in their 60s with associates of [Name redacted] and [Name redacted] at Casino Windsor on July 28 that subsequently led to their arrests at the tunnel and the seizure of more than 15,000 ecstasy tablets. The mules drove their own vehicles and were allegedly offered up to US$1,000 per person for each trip, but in one documented instance a female minor, driving her dad's vehicle, was paid US$200 in advance. According to the affidavit, she met [Name redacted] through a friend and the Windsor man helped tape the tablets to her body at his home after convincing her to smuggle the ecstasy. Those arrested locally appeared in court Thursday to be formally arraigned. Bernardon said those arrested were not connected to bikers or other gangs but represented "a criminal organization working on its own." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine