shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
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If you trust the creepy TPS, OPP, RCMP or any other Canadian police force, you have to be high on something yourself. I hope the FBI are at least aware of what rackets are being run here.
They not only had the stones to ask for the $2.5M back from U.S authorities, for which the U.S told them to F off, but, they also were nice enough to create some work for U.S DEA by losing 500 pounds of poisons which are being passed around in the U.S and Canada.
The dispute threatens police co-operation between Canada and the U.S., as a number of sources affiliated with U.S. law enforcement accuse Canadian police of secretly operating an agent on U.S. soil without permission.
One of the arrested men, who was carrying the money, was a 27-year-old car dealership employee from Vancouver. The U.S.-linked sources say he had worked as a Canadian police agent, fraternizing with importers of cocaine and exporters of marijuana.
Believing he was working as a Canadian police agent, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reluctantly allowed him to return to Vancouver without charge. Shortly after the seizure, the DEA office at the U.S Embassy in Ottawa received a call from Insp. Michel Forget of the Sûreté du Québec, a provincial police force, demanding to know the details of the L.A. arrest, and asking for the $2.5 million back.
"[Forget] wasn't diplomatic or apologetic," a U.S. source told CBC News, believing Canadian investigators were running a covert operation in L.A. without alerting the DEA. "What it was was an international incident."
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The U.S.-linked sources complain Quebec police watched 500 kilograms of cocaine be distributed in Ontario and Quebec only to lose track of it — an amount that they say is worth close to $25 million on the street.
They not only had the stones to ask for the $2.5M back from U.S authorities, for which the U.S told them to F off, but, they also were nice enough to create some work for U.S DEA by losing 500 pounds of poisons which are being passed around in the U.S and Canada.
The dispute threatens police co-operation between Canada and the U.S., as a number of sources affiliated with U.S. law enforcement accuse Canadian police of secretly operating an agent on U.S. soil without permission.
One of the arrested men, who was carrying the money, was a 27-year-old car dealership employee from Vancouver. The U.S.-linked sources say he had worked as a Canadian police agent, fraternizing with importers of cocaine and exporters of marijuana.
Believing he was working as a Canadian police agent, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reluctantly allowed him to return to Vancouver without charge. Shortly after the seizure, the DEA office at the U.S Embassy in Ottawa received a call from Insp. Michel Forget of the Sûreté du Québec, a provincial police force, demanding to know the details of the L.A. arrest, and asking for the $2.5 million back.
"[Forget] wasn't diplomatic or apologetic," a U.S. source told CBC News, believing Canadian investigators were running a covert operation in L.A. without alerting the DEA. "What it was was an international incident."
.......................................
The U.S.-linked sources complain Quebec police watched 500 kilograms of cocaine be distributed in Ontario and Quebec only to lose track of it — an amount that they say is worth close to $25 million on the street.