Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jun 2009 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Bill Kaufmann Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) HUGE CALGARY COKE BUST SETS ALBERTA RECORD Drugs Valued In Excess Of $8 Million Seized And 14 People Arrested In making the largest cocaine bust in Alberta history, city police say they've won a major battle but not the war. In a series of seizures spanning a year that eventually led to the discovery of 80 kg of cocaine with a street value of $8 million, police say they've broken the back of a major organization that moved the drug from B.C. into Alberta. But Staff Sgt. Darren Cave said it's only one criminal group among a number plying the lucrative trade in a city whose continued affluence feeds an appetite for the drug. "This is one criminal organization we've put a dent in -- we realize there are others out there," said Cave, standing behind bags and tightly-wrapped bricks of cocaine and several firearms seized in raids. "They're never really shut down ... for criminals, it's all they know, they'll re-start." Even some of the 14 people arrested in the crackdown and since released, he said, could be back committing crimes. But police believe Operation High Noon, which began with a raid in January 2008 that netted 42 kg of cocaine from a safe in a home in the 300 block of Hawthorne Dr. N.W., drove up the price of cocaine by reducing its availability. Police also found 25 kg of the drug in the same home a week earlier. In the months after that, police found an additional 13 kg of cocaine cleverly hidden in vehicles in what was a sophisticated operation. "It's not just someone ripping out a seat cushion -- it goes far beyond that, " said Cave, adding the active part of the investigation ended last December. "What you're seeing here is part of the upper echelon of the distribution network." The discovery of packaging for 20 more kilos of cocaine that "illustrates the high volume of cocaine passing through our city," he said. Cave said Calgary's relative affluence means much of the cocaine heading to Calgary -- including that seized in Operation High Noon -- is destined for city users. "It's staying here -- you've got to look at the economy in Calgary," he said. Police held off on announcing the entire scope of the seizures until prosecutors were certain they could lay trafficking conspiracy charges -- an offence rarely alleged by local authorities, said Cave. Police also seized $330,000 in cash from the suspects in an investigation that involved police forces in B.C. and throughout Alberta. Prosecutors, he said, are seeking 15-20 prison sentences for the most serious offences. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug