Pubdate: Fri, 07 Nov 2008 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Stuart Hunter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) ALLEGED DRUG DEALER'S AGE 'SIGN OF THE TIMES' Seniors Not Surprised At 82-Year-Old's Arrest Times are tough. That was the threadbare sentiment at the sewing club at the Winfield Seniors Centre yesterday, where the chit-chat centred around the arrest of an 82-year-old Lake Country man for his alleged part in smuggling more than 27 kilograms of heroin into Canada worth an estimated $8 million to $11 million. "It really doesn't surprise me -- everybody is tapped out," said resident Debbie Andrew. "Maybe it's a sign of the times. I doubt he is a heroin dealer but where does an 80-year-old go to find a job these days?" Over at the Branch 55 Seniors Centre in nearby Kelowna, Brian Burnell took time out from a card game to give his two cents on the arrest of Donald Andrew Stewart. "The price of everything has gone sky-high -- gas, food, you name it," said Burnell, 77. "It's hard when you are on a pension to make ends meet." Stewart and three Ontario men -- Tran Van Dinh, 42, Quyen Ngoc Thuyen Nguyen, 39, and Vinh Thanh Nguyen, 47 -- are charged with importation of heroin, possession for the purpose of trafficking and conspiracy to import heroin. On Oct. 22, Canadian Border Services Agency officers in Halifax intercepted a shipping container from Pakistan. An X-ray showed an anomaly in 81 cardboard boxes in a shipment of 430 boxes filled with towels. "The heroin was packed in aluminum sheeting and hidden in the walls of the boxes," said RCMP Sgt. Marc LaPorte. "We removed the drugs from the container and allowed it to continue." The container was shipped to a Toronto-area business where four men showed up on Oct. 29 and left with the 81 boxes. They were arrested soon after. Two days later, police searched an Ajax, Ont., home and found a live hand grenade, ammunition and documentation relating to the shipment. LaPorte said it is the biggest bust in about 15 years -- enough for 270,000 doses. "Twenty-seven kilos is not seized on a regular basis," LaPorte said. "We have seized larger amounts but in those cases we could not tie bodies to the drugs." The heroin is 75-per-cent pure. Police aren't sure of the final destination for the heroin or what would make a senior allegedly get involved. "I have not seen such an old person be charged with such a serious offence," LaPorte said. "He's come a long way to associate with these people." Stewart is in custody. His next court appearance is Nov. 20. Stewart was given a conditional discharge and seven months' probation for a 2006 assault charge. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin