CBC is reporting that "The Alberta Law Enforcement Response Teams (ALERT) broke up a cross-border drug ring tied to Mexican cartels and seized what it says is its largest amount of cocaine ever. The two-year-long Project Cerberus began in May 2023, with the help of RCMP, Calgary police and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. It wrapped this month."
"According to ALERT, the network would get the cocaine from Mexican cartels, transport it through the United States, then import and distribute it across Canada from British Columbia to Ontario." The Network? WTF?
"Five Alberta men — two from Calgary and three from Edmonton — have been arrested and now face a combined 31 charges related to organized crime, drugs, money laundering and conspiracy. A sixth man, from Edmonton, was first arrested as part of the investigation in October 2024 after 96 kilograms of cocaine was found in a home in Houston."
"ALERT says he was involved in transporting the drugs through the U.S. en route to Canada. He was sentenced to more than 11 years in U.S. federal prison."
"The first cocaine seized was found in just such a compartment, when Manitoba RCMP discovered 61 kilograms of the drug hidden in a vehicle near Richer, Man., in March 2024." The Manitoba RCMP strikes again.
Kelly Sundberg, a former Canada Border Services Agency officer "would like to see drug-sniffing K-9 units and X-ray scanning technology available at all ports of entry 24/7." Exactly. Drug sniffing dogs at the border should be automatic.
ALERT is reporting that "Jack Kasjaniuk, 35-year-old from Edmonton, was charged with possession of drugs with the intent to distribute. Kasjaniuk had pled guilty, and on September 8, 2026, was handed a 135-month federal prison sentence by the Southern District of Texas Court."
Five more suspects charged include "Reza Muhammad, 26-year-old from Calgary; Jordan Plamondon, 40-year-old from Spruce Grove; Ji Hwan Kim, 34-year-old from Calgary; Allan Leung, 33-year-old from Edmonton; and James Morrissette, 33-year-old from Edmonton."
You can tell the FBI were involved with this by the wording of the narrative. They're not naming the Wolf Pack or the Hells Angels they're just calling it an international crime syndicate tied to the Mexican cartel because they want to blame it on their fake super villain Ryan Wedding.
The Mexican cartel isn't in Canada. The Hells Angels are. The Hells Angels are the cartel's best customer. Just because the Hells Angels buy drugs from the cartel, that doesn't mean the cartel is in Canada. Those fake busts in Surrey and Alberta were part of the FBI's false narrative. LA Familia worked for the Hells Angels. Peter Alan Griffon was a police agent.
ReplyDeleteWhy don't HA get named in these articles or by police? It's not like HA is being portrayed as any sort of good guy buy media or police, so why not just name them? Is it liable for slander thing?
ReplyDeleteIt was like that a while ago. Before the Hells Angels accumulated so many criminal convictions in BC they seemed untouchable. The first time criminal organization charges against them stuck was when they didn't name the criminal organization. Now we are getting a big disinformation push from US Intelligence. That and the fact that the CFSEU in BC is compromised. Unlike the RCMP in Manitoba who aren't.
DeleteI find it interesting that Canada’s first female judge Emily Murphy wrote in 1922 that: “The drug rings are at present being systematically pushed out into the country. The mines and lumber camps are fertile new fields for the drug operator and already he has got busy amongst them. They include many prominent and professional men, bankers, doctors, lawyers, and others.”
ReplyDeleteSo nothing has changed for 100 years. And there was a suspected conspiracy amongst prominent and professional men, bankers, doctors, lawyers, and others. By others did she mean Senior Law Enforcement officials but it would have been too dangerous to directly implicate them as the first female judge in Canada?