Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jul 2012 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2012 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/letters.html Website: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Paul Cherry UNLUCKY POT DEALER GETS DISCHARGE IN COURT Riviere des Prairies man arrested while police were on crack-sting operation MONTREAL -- The fortunes of a Riviere des Prairies man were changed significantly Friday after a judge granted him an unconditional discharge in a drug trafficking case where he ended up being arrested by accident. On Sept. 8, 2011, this 24-year-old man must have felt like the unluckiest pot dealer on the face of the Earth. According to a summary of details read into the court record before Quebec Court Judge Denis Mondor at the Montreal courthouse, the Montreal police received a tip that a crack dealer was operating in a public area in RiviA(re des Prairies. All the police had to work with was a phone number they were told belonged to the dealer, said defence lawyer Sarah Maude Landriault. Plans for a sting operation were made, an undercover cop called the number and an outdoor meeting was set up. While waiting, the undercover officer noticed a car parked nearby. The RiviA(re des Prairies man was inside and eventually approached. "The police (officer) asked for crack and (he) said 'no, I have marijuana'," Landriault recounted for Mondor. He was placed under arrest and a search of his car turned up 37 grams of marijuana, a scale and two cellphones. Landriault said it turned out his arrest had nothing to do with the call placed to the crack dealer and that he approached the undercover cop out of the blue. After summarizing the arrest, Landriault proceeded to offer proof the man has turned his life around since his arrest. She produced letters stating that he is very active in his church, does volunteer work and had completed 40 hours of community service before his court date on Friday. She said he has also registered at a trade school to begin studying electrical mechanics in September. She noted that he has no criminal record and was not known to police before his arrest. "He is off to a fresh start," she said while arguing against any other type of sentence. "It wouldn't be in society's interest to stop you in" the path you are on, Mondor told the man while granting the unconditional discharge, which means he won't be left with a criminal record. Mondor said the type of drug involved, the amount of community service already completed, and his plans to attend a trade school in the fall, were factors in his decision. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt