Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2010 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Matthew Pearson 'COCAINE WAS WORTH MORE TO YOU ... THAN A LIFE': JUDGE Parents of Dead Man Warn Others Against Being a Drug Mule for 'Easy Money' The parents of a young man who was stripped, chained to a chair and beaten after he tried to make some money as a drug mule urged others not to make the same mistake. "Do not be lured by this so-called easy money and the glamorous life that you think a gang member or drug trafficker has," said Ian and Marlyn Ferguson in a statement Friday. Just moments before, the seventh man convicted in connection with the death of their son, Graeme Ferguson, a former security guard, was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Paul Layoun, 31, pleaded guilty to manslaughter, conspiracy to kidnap and forcibly confine Ferguson, conspiracy to possess cocaine for the purpose of trafficking and a raft of weapons-related offences. His sentence brings to an end the five-year effort to identify and punish Ferguson's killers. After Layoun was led away in handcuffs, a tearful Marlyn Ferguson stood to thank the judge, Ann Alder. "This has been very difficult for us, but we're glad we've come and seen this through." Graeme Ferguson, a former security guard, made two trips from B.C. to Ottawa in 2005 to deliver drugs. When he arrived at the Voyageur bus station on Catherine Street on his second trip, he saw police and thought he might be in trouble, so he abandoned his luggage and returned to B.C. The luggage was later placed in the unclaimed luggage depot inside the bus station. Ferguson returned to Ottawa the next month and was grabbed by the people who'd been expecting the drugs. They took him to Montreal, where he was stripped to his underwear, chained, beaten and held for six days in a warehouse. On July 19, 2005, when they finally accepted his story that he'd left the drugs at the bus station in a panic after seeing the police, two of his captors brought him back to the bus station and he picked up the missing luggage. The bags included one suitcase containing 17 kilograms of pure Colombian cocaine with a police-estimated street value of $3.5 million. Ferguson left the station with his bags, but collapsed at the corner of Catherine and Kent streets and was later declared dead on arrival at hospital as a result of his beating. He was 27. Ferguson was paid $3,000 for his first trip and was to be paid $12,000 for the trip that ended his life. Six other men are already in prison in connection to Ferguson's death. Four men pleaded guilty to manslaughter, conspiracy to kidnap and forcibly confine Ferguson, and conspiracy to possess cocaine for the purpose of trafficking. A fifth man pleaded guilty to forcible confinement, extortion and robbery, while a sixth man pleaded guilty to extortion and forcible confinement. They each received sentences ranging from two to 15 years. Layoun evaded police for four years, but feels remorse for what he did, his lawyer said in court Friday. "He comes before the court a much-chastened individual," Joseph Bloomenfeld said. "All he wants to do from here on in is have a good life." Layoun wore an oversized, graphic-printed white T-shirt and glasses and had a neatly-trimmed goatee. The court heard he has lost more than 220 pounds since his arrest. "I feel grief for what I've done," he said, standing in the prisoner's box to address the Fergusons. "My lawyer didn't tell me to say that. I'm saying it for my own goodwill." The judge accepted a joint submission from the Crown and defence lawyers and sentenced Layoun to 12 years in prison, less a year for time already served. The sheer brutality of the beating, the quantity of drugs involved and Layoun's direct role in Ferguson's death need to be renounced, the judge said. She added the high-stakes world of drug-trafficking is a haven for violence and greed. "Mr. Ferguson died because cocaine was worth more to you and others than a life and I find that morally repulsive," Alder said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake