Pubdate: Tue, 20 Nov 2007 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Mike McIntyre Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) ACCUSED MEN IN DRUG BUST TRY TO GET CASE TOSSED TWO British Columbia men are seeking to have the richest highway drug bust in Manitoba history tossed out of court, claiming RCMP violated their rights by stopping their vehicle just west of Winnipeg. Derek Laviolette and James Oddleifson are accused of possessing 46 kilograms of cocaine, which carries a street value of up to $3 million. Their two-week trial began Monday with a motion to exclude all the evidence, based on what they claim was an illegal search and seizure. Queen's Bench Justice Murray Sinclair is expected to rule later this week. Headingley RCMP arrested the accused in July 2004 on the Trans-Canada Highway after a seemingly routine traffic stop proved to be anything but. Laviolette and Oddleifson had been travelling east towards Winnipeg and caught the attention of the Mounties when they made an abrupt lane change, court was told. An officer patrolling the westbound lane of the highway made a U-turn and stopped their minivan, which had B.C. plates. She told court she was considering issuing a ticket for failing to use a signal when switching lanes. Laviolette did not have a driver's licence, claiming he had lost his wallet in Calgary. The officer said she had grounds to issue another ticket, this time for failing to produce a licence. The men said they were headed to Toronto to pick up some items for a friend at McGill University. The officer said she immediately became suspicious, since McGill is in Montreal. Other Mounties arrived at the scene to assist, and Laviolette and Oddleifson were split up to be quizzed further. "We wanted to get their stories straight," the officer who stopped the vehicle told court Monday. She described Laviolette as having a "quivering and nervous" voice as he spoke. RCMP eventually felt there was sufficient grounds to search the vehicle, which they impounded while an application for a warrant was completed. The search quickly moved the incident from a Highway Traffic Act probe into a massive criminal investigation. Police found 46 individually-wrapped kilogram bricks of cocaine hidden inside the vehicle. Both accused were held in custody, but eventually released on strict bail conditions that allowed them to return to the West Coast. Police continued their investigation, hoping they could follow the drug trail and find the suspected supplier. However, no additional arrests have been made. Defence lawyer Evan Roitenberg challenged the actions of police Monday, saying the lane change by the accused was done out of necessity to avoid a potential crash. Winnipeg police had stopped a recreational vehicle on the side of the highway, and Laviolette and Oddleifson had moved into the middle lane to give themselves some additional room while passing, court was told. The minivan was also properly registered -- albeit in someone else's name -- but there was no indication it had been stolen or that any criminal activity was taking place, Roitenberg said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake