Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jul 2007 Source: Guardian, The (CN PI) Copyright: 2007 The Guardian, Charlottetown Guardian Group Incorporated Contact: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/174 KINGPIN IN DRUGS GETS OVER FIVE YEARS A 42-year-old Charlottetown man described by police as a key figure in an operation that imported large quantities of cocaine and other drugs into P.E.I. from Nova Scotia for sale by a network of street-level dealers has been sentenced to over five years in a federal correctional facility. Derreck Dean Huggan was sentenced Tuesday in provincial court to serve 6 1/2 years behind bars for conspiracy to traffic in cocaine. Provincial Court Judge Nancy Orr sentenced Huggan to a further 6 1/2 years for conspiracy to traffic in the painkiller Hydromorphone. Huggan received terms of 3 1/2 years each on charges of conspiracy to traffic in hashish and conspiracy to traffic in Ecstasy, a stimulant. On top of that, Huggan received 2 1/2 years for possession of marijuana for the purposes of trafficking and a sentence of 14 months for indictable cocaine possession. Twelve months will be subtracted from each of those sentences as credit for time served while awaiting disposition of his case. All six sentences will run concurrently. In addition to the time he will spend in custody, Huggan was prohibited from the possession of firearms, explosives, crossbows and ammunition for life. Crown counsel Erin Mitchell and defence counsel Jim Hornby jointly recommended the sentences imposed by the court. In giving affect to their joint recommendation, Orr expressed the hope the sentences imposed Tuesday would be long enough to deter Huggan and others from engaging in the drug trade. The court was told Huggan and his associates arranged for the transportation of wholesale quantities of cocaine, Hydromorphone, cannabis resin and Ecstasy to P.E.I. Those drugs were then distributed to a network of street-level drug dealers. Several of those engaged in street-level drug sales did so to pay off large personal drug debts, it was indicated. Huggan was kept under surveillance by police for a number of months starting in 2005. Police said Huggan became aware he was being watched and utilized counter-surveillance measures in an effort to conceal his activities. When police eventually raided Huggan's Orlebar Street residence and an apartment he maintained elsewhere in the city they seized a quantity of drugs, drug paraphernalia and $6,000 in cash. A number of Huggan's associates have already been convicted and sentenced to federal time. Others are awaiting the disposition of their cases. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek