Saturday 20 August 2011

An ex-Mountie on trial in Surrey for misusing a police database to get information about the Bacon brothers has now been charged in the U.S. with conspiracy to smuggle cocaine into Canada and recruiting a border guard to help him do it.

An ex-Mountie on trial in Surrey for misusing a police database to get information about the Bacon brothers has now been charged in the U.S. with conspiracy to smuggle cocaine into Canada and recruiting a border guard to help him do it.

Abbotsford resident Rapinder (Rob) Sidhu, and co-accused Anthony Jurcev, were indicted by a grand jury in Seattle this week, according to court documents obtained by The Vancouver Sun.

Sidhu is in the middle of a trial in Surrey Provincial Court for allegedly impersonating a police officer on July 31, 2007 to get the address of the Bacons from the RCMP’s Operational Communications Centre. He is back in court in that case in September.

The U.S. indictment alleges that beginning at least by the middle of 2007 until at least May 2008, Sidhu and Jurcev worked with convicted smugglers Rob Shannon and Devron Quast “to operate a cocaine transportation organization based in British Columbia.”

“On a regular basis during this time period, the B.C. cocaine organization exported, and attempted to export, loads of cocaine from the United States to Canada,” the indictment says. “The cocaine was concealed in vans and recreational vehicles.”

The indictment also says that Sidhu, who left the RCMP in 2003 in the middle of an internal investigation, “recruited an employee of the Canada Border Services Agency, who agreed to allow and did allow vehicles containing cocaine to pass through his lane at the Lynden/Aldergrove Port of Entry.”

That border guard, Jaspal Grewal, pleaded guilty in a Seattle courtroom in July to his role in the criminal gang. He is to be sentenced in October. Both Shannon and Quast earlier pleaded guilty to their roles in the smuggling organization, which U.S. authorities allege was run for the benefit of the Hells Angels in B.C. and involved more than $19 million worth of marijuana and cocaine going back and forth across the border over five years.

So far, 24 B.C. men have pleaded guilty to their roles in the massive operation.

Neither Sidhu nor Jurcev could be reached for comment Friday. Jurcev had been named on an earlier indictment filed by the U.S. Attorney.

The indictment alleges Sidhu and Jurcev were behind two intercepted shipments of cocaine, totalling 478 kilograms. One load was found inside a recreational vehicle stopped by police in Orange County, California on July 24, 2007. The other was located inside luggage in a minivan intercepted in Everett, Washington on May 16, 2008.

And the indictment claims there were many more cocaine shipments that police did not intercept.

“Members of the B.C. cocaine organization communicated with each other via prepaid cellular telephones and encrypted BlackBerry messages, and other secretive means, often referring to each other, themselves and the cocaine using nicknames and codes,” the indictment says.

The U.S. also wants the two men to surrender any assets they received from their alleged cocaine smuggling.

Sidhu pleaded guilty in July 2003 to causing “fear of personal injury” in another domestic case. He also pleaded guilty in 2005 to two counts of fraud over $5,000 and received a 12-month conditional sentence concurrent on both counts.

 

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