Pubdate: Saturday 14 March 1998 Source: Ottawa Citizen (Canada) Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Author: Don Campbell POLICE RAID MASSIVE MOONSHINE OPERATION Quebec Bootleggers Supplied Bars, Police Say NAMUR, Quebec -- Tucked away in the rolling Laurentian hills, a dilapidated barn houses a homemade distillery for what could be the largest and most sophisticated bootlegging operation ever uncovered in Quebec. Surete du Quebec officers from Hull raided the rural farm on Highway 363 yesterday, halfway between Namur and Notre-Dame-de-la-Paix, about 22 kilometres north of Montebello. The raid was part of a massive undercover operation nicknamed Operation Baboche (Operation Bootleg), which also targeted several locations in the Montreal and St-Jerome areas. Eight-three provincial police officers swooped down on nine locations in Quebec at 10 a.m. yesterday, capping a one-month investigation into an elaborate organization that produced, bottled and sold illegal alcohol to bars as well as individuals. Police have not yet determined how much money the operation was bringing in, but say it might have been worth millions. The massive investigation began in earnest late last month, after an informant told police about the operation. Inspectors with Quebec's liquor board, the Regie des alcools, have stepped up their efforts to locate illegal booze in licensed establishments in recent months, reacting to suggestions by industry insiders that as much as 27 per cent of alcohol sales in the province involve illegal liquor. In the raid near Namur, police arrested a 52-year-old man and a 53-year-old woman at the rented farm, which includes a quaint chalet. The two were still being questioned last night at provincial police headquarters in Papineauville. Charges involving fraud and the production and distribution of contraband alcohol were pending. Seasoned investigators marvelled at the organization's complexity and its attention to detail; they were especially impressed by the distillery's capabilities. From the road, the two-storey distillery looks like a weathered, slightly leaning barn. But the barn features living quarters for workers and extensive hydro hookups for the numerous kettles used to produce alcohol that police estimate was 92-per-cent pure. The alcohol was then shipped to a location closer to St-Jerome. The finished product eventually found its way to bars on the Kanawake Reserve and in the St- Jerome area. Police were also amazed at the quality of the labels the organization allegedly produced for the contraband alcohol and are trying to trace the labels' origin. "If I brought one of the bottles of liquor they produced and you looked at it, you wouldn't know the difference from a legal bottle," said Capt. Richard Begin, head of the provincial police's organized crime unit, which works out of St-Jerome. Raids on warehouses near St-Jerome netted 10,000 litres of alcohol in large plastic containers, waiting to be bottled. It represented some 4,800 1.5-litre bottles with a street value approaching $150,000. Police also seized 140 bottles ready for sale, in addition to countless bogus stickers for rum and vodka. "We haven't been able to calculate the potential profit because what these people were selling for between $15 and $20 would cost $40 to $50 at the Regie des Alcools," Capt. Begin said. "We had a big bust last spring near Mont-Laurier and this certainly compares in every area, except the capacity to produce. This is by far, much larger." Capt. Begin said he believes the organization had been in operation since last September. He said he thought it had just completed a shipment and was preparing to embark on another when the police conducted their raid. He said his investigators found no link with organized crime, such as motorcycle gangs. He did say the investigation was far from over, and the police may make more arrests. Police netted seven suspects during yesterday's raid; investigators believe the ring may involve as many as 100 people. Several of those arrested yesterday are known to police. Inspectors will also be combing bars and nightclubs in the St-Jerome area, looking for illegal booze already on the shelves. "This involved a lot of money," said Capt. Begin, while officers searched the chalet and distillery. Capt. Begin remarked that " a message should go out to people who insist on buying illegal booze E That is, that we have no control over the quality or quantity of what is being produced illegally and that could be dangerous." Copyright 1998 The Ottawa Citizen