Pubdate: Mon, 17 Sep 2007 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Bruce Owen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) GUILTY PLEAS EXPECTED IN COUPLE'S METH CASE A husband and wife caught up in allegations they helped smuggle the raw ingredient for methamphetamine from Canada to drug labs in the United States will likely plead guilty rather than go to trial, the prosecutor handling the case said. Hugh Stevens and Sandra Jacobi will agree to a deal that will see him get a 13-year prison sentence and her a three-year sentence, Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Duszkiewicz said. Both are expected to enter pleas in Buffalo, N.Y. before Christmas for their part in the drug ring that had Manitoba connections. Stevens, 61, and Jacobi, 50, are the last defendants to agree to plea deals -- all other major suspects arrested in Buffalo and Sacramento, Calif. have already agreed to co-operate with authorities. But the case is far from over as those arrested in Canada have yet to go to trial. Preliminary hearing dates for two of the suspects start Feb. 4 next year. The case centres on how bulk amounts of ephedrine -- the prime ingredient in methamphetamine -- ended up in a California meth lab controlled by the Mexican Mafia. The ephedrine was legally imported into Canada through a Thunder Bay, Ont., company, but allegedly diverted onto the black market. Ephedrine is banned in the U.S. Its sale is regulated in Canada by Health Canada. Two of the eight Canadian defendants are no longer alive to be prosecuted. Lac du Bonnet resident Rodger Bruneau Sr. was charged as being the ring's kingpin, but he died in his sleep of an accidental drug overdose more than two years ago. A 10th defendant, Emmanuel (Manny) Barbagianis, was shot to death in Winnipeg more than a year ago. His slaying remains unsolved. Duszkiewicz said it's possible once the case ends in Canada, which could take years, it's possible U.S. authorities could try to extradite Canadian defendants to face prosecution in the U.S. He also said once Stevens is finished his sentence he'll be deported to Scotland. Stevens was born in Scotland and though he has lived in Canada and the U.S., he is a citizen of neither country. Drug Enforcement Administration agents, RCMP and Winnipeg police arrested about 90 people in the smuggling scheme in September 2004. It's alleged Bruneau and Stevens recruited other people to use cars, trucks and horse trailers to move hundreds of pounds of ephedrine from Canada into the U.S. through the Niagara-Buffalo region. In July 2004, police found 195 kilograms of ephedrine hidden with a horse in a trailer that they had followed from a racetrack outside Hamilton, Ont., across the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge. RCMP officers from Winnipeg were set to testify at Stevens' and Jacobi's trial next month, but that was put on hold when the couple notified the court of their intention to accept plea agreements. Both could have faced much longer prison terms if convicted on all charges at trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek