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Drug Ring Moved Cocaine, Ecstasy Across Northern Border
seized 414 kilograms of cocaine and 29 kilograms of Ecstasy
GREAT FALLS – U.S. and Canadian authorities said Monday that a smuggling ring used the remote northern border to move more than 1,000 kilograms of cocaine into Canada and 1.3 million tablets of the designer drug Ecstasy into the United States over more than two years.

U.S. Attorney for Montana Michael Cotter said the international investigation seized 414 kilograms of cocaine and 29 kilograms of Ecstasy, and 17 people were arrested in the U.S. and Canada, making it one of the largest drug busts on either side of the border.

"This is certainly the largest seizure both here in Montana and Saskatchewan," Cotter said in a news conference in Great Falls.

Authorities revealed details of the operation and the investigation for the first time as U.S. District Judge Sam Haddon sentenced one of the ring's drivers to five years in prison Monday.

Cotter and officials from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Department of Homeland Security , the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Border Patrol described how from 2009 until last fall, the ring would use rental vehicles to transport cocaine from southern California to small border outposts in Montana. The cocaine would then be delivered across the border and driven to British Columbia for distribution.

The suspects also hid Ecstasy and marijuana from British Columbia in vehicles that would head south into the United States for distribution.

The estimated street value of the drugs seized is $17.5 million, Cotter said.

Authorities first became aware of the ring after an arrest was made at a border post last year, said Aaron Heitke, deputy chief of the Border Patrol in Montana.

Cotter and Mercer Armstrong, the officer in charge of the RCMP F Division in Saskatchewan, said the investigation shows the need for interagency cooperation to control illicit drug smuggling through the remote 585-mile-long border between Montana and Canada.

"I certainly wouldn't want to say that it's the beginning of an epidemic, but certainly the nature of our border makes for the possibility for criminal organizations to look at that border area to be able to carry out the goals that they have," Armstrong said.

The alleged ringleader, Brock Palfrey of Silverstar, British Columbia, is awaiting trial in Canada on charges of importing cocaine into Canada, possession with intent to distribute and criminal organization, Armstrong said. Two other alleged co-conspirators are awaiting trial in Canada and a third has negotiated a plea deal.

Two Canadian men have been sentenced in Montana after negotiating plea deals. On Monday, Haddon sentenced Christopher Chambers to five years in prison after Chambers pleaded guilty to conspiracy to export cocaine.

Chambers drove a scout car that accompanied the rental cars carrying drugs from California to the border.

Haddon gave Chambers a lower sentence than federal guidelines recommend after Chambers pleaded guilty to conspiracy to export cocaine. The judge said he factored in that Chambers had not been in trouble before and also the support shown by the 30 friends and family members from Canada who were in the courtroom.

A contrite Chambers pledged to be a "better son, a better husband and a better man."

"My actions in this conspiracy were inexcusable and very immature," he told the judge.

Haddon previously sentenced another Canadian, Gregory German, to 7 ½ years in prison for his role in the drug smuggling ring.

Authorities said more arrests could follow.
 
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