Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jul 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: Don Lajoie, Windsor Star NINE-YEAR TERM URGED FOR DEALER A convicted gun trafficker should serve an additional seven to nine years in jail after he pleaded guilty to drug charges, a federal prosecutor said Friday. Richard Pollock said Mazin Odish and several co-conspirators provided large quantities of drugs to undercover RCMP and OPP officers in exchange for truckloads of cigarettes. Odish, 30, pleaded guilty to possession of drugs for the purposes of trafficking. He had pleaded guilty in June to a firearms charge and was sentenced to two years for attempting to sell an AK-47 knockoff to undercover police. Pollock told the court he would be asking for a further seven-to nine-year sentence on the drug charges. He said the police investigation saw undercover officers arranging to trade "black-market" cigarettes to Odish, and several co-conspirators, in exchange for cocaine, methamphetamine and Oxycodone over several transactions beginning in the summer of 2004 and lasting through winter 2005. Lawyer Brian Dube, representing Odish, told the court he would argue for a four-year sentence and wanted his client credited with already serving three years because of the one year he has already spent serving time in the Windsor Jail under protective custody and in overcrowded and poor conditions. Pollock said the conspirators met with undercover officers on several occasions. The meeting sites included mall parking lots, doughnut shops and Odish's convenience store in the 3400 block of Wyandotte Street East. In September 2004, investigators arranged to trade three cases of cigarettes, swapped in the parking lot of Devonshire Mall, for 110.6 grams of cocaine with a street value of $16,590. The pattern was repeated a half dozen times. In February 2005, Odish agreed to provide two kilos of cocaine, plus $1.2 million, including a $200,000 down payment for 1,000 cases of cigarettes. A separate arrangement to purchase five AK-47, Russian-made assault rifles went awry when Odish could furnish only one of the guns and undercover officers determined it was a Romanian-made weapon of inferior quality. Pollock insisting Odish should get little credit for spending a year in the Windsor Jail, while Dube argued the conditions of incarceration were so harsh that his client should get a three to one credit, rather than the usual two to one, for days served. Dube said Odish developed a rash in jail, a sinus condition and headaches because of the lack of hygiene and overcrowding, sometimes resulting in three prisoners sharing a cell built for one. He said mattresses were dirty and stained, laundry returned unclean and there were only two bunks to a cell, the third inmate forced to sleep on a mattress on the floor. Sometimes inmates were "dummied," or beaten by other prisoners. But Pollock scoffed at suggestions Odish was in protective custody to keep him safe from fellow inmates, noting he was there because he sought that status because it was calmer and quieter. "You're Mazin Odish," he said. "You traffic Ak-47s and cocaine. Who at the county jail is going to bother you? You're not going to get dummied." The sentencing hearing resumes Monday. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek