Words are just words, and scum are just that. The almost mythical reverence with which the mainstream kkkanadian public hold the fucking cops, the army, and all things so fucking democratically kkkanadian (eh) is sickening. This type of uncritical acceptance is the kind of crap that leads people to the fucking death camps. Read about this idiot....
Montague RCMP officer pleads guilty to theft of drugs in evidence
A Montague RCMP officer who stole drugs from a police lockup has pleaded guilty to three charges against him.
Const. Blair Ross, a 25-year veteran of the force, appeared before Chief Justice Jacqueline Matheson in P.E.I. Supreme Court in Charlottetown Friday to enter the guilty pleas.
Ross is charged with stealing exhibits with a value of more than $5,000, breach of trust and possession of oxycodone, morphine and hydromorphone.
In June the RCMP suspended Ross while a code of conduct investigation was underway after someone noticed irregularities in some police exhibits as part of a random check during another investigation.
His case was adjourned until Feb. 6, 2014 for sentencing after Ross’s lawyer requested a pre-sentence report.
Ross has previous convictions for assaulting a woman in 1998 and shoving a man during a disagreement in 2011.
Organizations: RCMP
The cops often get away with this shit. But the reason many of them get involved is that a) they aren't very bright, and b)they have access to weapons, drugs, and have dirtbag friends in high fucking places, namely, politicians. Read.
MONTREAL – A former Montreal police officer currently serving a twelve-year sentence for smuggling marijuana into the United States has been turned down in his request to take a European vacation while on parole.
Daniel Lapierre, 65, was a member of the Montreal Urban Community police force (now the Montreal police) between 1974 and 1984. He left to join the private sector and by 1986 was involved in an ambitious investment to build a seaside resort and casino in Dominican Republic.
He eventually fell into financial trouble and, in 2000, became a very prolific smuggler, shipping several kilograms of Quebec-grown marijuana into the U.S. using a vast network of people willing to work as drug mules.
By 2003, according to estimates by American authorities, the network Lapierre headed from his home in St-Sauveur was shipping 70 kilograms of pot on a bi-weekly basis. He and 26 other people were arrested in 2005 after an investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and RCMP.
The case was filed in U.S. District Court in Maine where, in 2007, Lapierre pleaded guilty to money laundering and conspiring to import more than 100 kilograms of marijuana. He did not challenge the forfeiture of more than $4 million police seized during the investigation and was sentenced to a 12-year prison term.
He was transferred to Canada in 2011, where Lapierre was dinged a second time as Canadian authorities fined him $850,000 for smuggling his drug profits into Canada. Later the same year, the Parole Board of Canada granted Lapierre full parole. The first two years of the release have gone by without incident and Lapierre recently informed the board he felt this merited a trip through Europe with his wife. But in order to leave Canada, he needed the parole board’s permission.
He presented a plan, in writing, stating that he wanted to visit several countries in Europe over a 25-day period. The plan, which received the approval of Lapierre’s parole officers, lacked details and the convicted drug smuggler had no written confirmation that the countries he wanted to visit would let him cross their borders.
Pierre Cadieux, the parole board member assigned to review the request, determined that such a vacation represented a risk to the two conditions that were attached to his release in 2011: that he be transparent about his finances and be prudent about who he associates with.
Lapierre has three years left to serve on his sentence.