Pubdate: Wed, 06 Oct 2010 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 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: Sam Cooper, The Province 'WRONG-WAY' BUST A BIGGIE Crystal Meth, As Well As Coke, In Shipments From Mexico Mounties say they are working with Mexican authorities after seizing about $9 million in cocaine and crystal meth in Vancouver that is believed to have come from Mexican drug cartels. The bust is one of the biggest ever in B.C., RCMP Staff-Sgt. Dave Goddard said at a news conference Tuesday in Vancouver. The Canada Border Services Agency recently intercepted seven marine shipping containers coming through the Port of Vancouver. The commercial containers, declared to contain "crafts," came from Mexico, police say. When suspicious officers inspected the containers, they found thousands of clay bricks amid lawn ornaments, bound for a Vancouver landscaping-type business. Police busted open the bricks and found about 300 kilograms of cocaine and crystal methamphetamine that had been baked inside the small pallets. A joint investigation by Vancouver police and the federal drug squad resulted in five arrests on Sept. 27 outside a Marpole bus loop. A sixth arrest was made at a nearby business connected to one of the men arrested. Police are withholding the name of the business as the international investigation continues, Goddard said. At the news conference, representatives from the Vancouver Police Department, the RCMP and the border services agency, together with burly undercover officers, surrounded a large table stacked with bags of coke and meth, as well as the broken bricks that secreted the drugs. Police say more charges are likely, but they are tight-lipped about which gangs are believed to be behind the seized shipment. The "huge-scale drug importation" indicates an international organized-crime group, RCMP Const. Michael McLaughlin said. The value of the drugs is estimated at between $8.7 million and $9.7 million. Three men, Mexican national Eduardo Sierra Gonzalez, 32, and Francisco Javier Gomez, 51, and Jason Quinn Lawrence, 42, both of Vancouver -- all previously unknown to police -- are charged with conspiracy to import narcotics, police say. Court records show the date of the alleged offence is May 15, 2010. All three are in custody and scheduled to appear today in provincial court in Vancouver. The bust was unusual, as crystal meth is produced in B.C. and usually smuggled south, not the other way around. "It's almost an anomaly, with crystal meth coming in," Goddard said. "It's like someone importing marijuana to B.C." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D