News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Ex-border-guard Gets Jail Time, Supervised Release |
Title: | US WA: Ex-border-guard Gets Jail Time, Supervised Release |
Published On: | 2008-04-08 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-04-09 00:47:19 |
EX-BORDER-GUARD GETS JAIL TIME, SUPERVISED RELEASE
Desmone Bastian Traded Sex With Woman For A Free Pass Through
Border
SEATTLE - A former U.S. border guard and Surrey resident who was
convicted of exchanging sex with a Canadian prostitute for free
passage into Washington state was sentenced Monday to 32 months in
jail and two years of supervised release.
Desmone Bastian, 31, was convicted in January and could have faced up
to 15 years in jail for accepting a bribe.
U.S. District Judge James Robart called Bastian's action "an
incredibly serious offence."
"A trusted servant of the U.S. government allowed an individual to
make multiple trips into the U.S. without any supervision," Robart
said during sentencing in Seattle.
He said Bastian, an American, had demonstrated a "propensity to deny
and blame others," and that his testimony regarding "the nature,
duration and frequency of encounters with the woman was not credible."
Bastian was arrested in October 2006 after finishing his shift at the
Peace Arch border crossing.
Earlier, Vancouver prostitute Sandra Maas had been charged with
smuggling both marijuana and oxycodone into the U.S., always going
through Bastian's lane.
Maas testified at Bastian's trial, admitting that she would meet
Bastian for sex as payment for being allowed to enter the U.S. without
being searched.
Bastian had also been charged with conspiring with Maas to smuggle
drugs into the U.S., but a jury acquitted him of aiding in the
importation of the drugs and was deadlocked on several other counts.
According to U.S. prosecutors, Bastian first contacted Maas at her
Vancouver escort service sometime in 2001 or 2002.
At first, Bastian paid her for sex. But he later told her about his
job, at one point wearing his uniform to her brothel. And beginning in
late 2004, he received free sex in exchange for letting her cross the
border.
Maas bragged to her drug conspirators that she had a connection at the
border that allowed her to easily get her goods into the U.S.
During the trial, prosecutors presented phone calls taped by the
Canadian police in which Maas discussed with her drug supplier how her
contact had checked records and she was not flagged in the system for
inspection.
But Maas' and Bastian's deal fell apart on April 14, 2006, when Maas
was stopped at the border by another guard while Bastian was posted to
the truck crossing.
It was then that U.S. inspectors discovered nearly 3,000 vacuum-sealed
oxycodone pills hidden in Maas' bra and panties.
Maas was charged with importing narcotics but, in a plea bargain with
the U.S. government, agreed to testify against Bastian in exchange for
a two-year sentence.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Susan Roe told the court Monday it was "a sad
day at this courthouse when a federal official is being sentenced for
bribery."
Desmone Bastian Traded Sex With Woman For A Free Pass Through
Border
SEATTLE - A former U.S. border guard and Surrey resident who was
convicted of exchanging sex with a Canadian prostitute for free
passage into Washington state was sentenced Monday to 32 months in
jail and two years of supervised release.
Desmone Bastian, 31, was convicted in January and could have faced up
to 15 years in jail for accepting a bribe.
U.S. District Judge James Robart called Bastian's action "an
incredibly serious offence."
"A trusted servant of the U.S. government allowed an individual to
make multiple trips into the U.S. without any supervision," Robart
said during sentencing in Seattle.
He said Bastian, an American, had demonstrated a "propensity to deny
and blame others," and that his testimony regarding "the nature,
duration and frequency of encounters with the woman was not credible."
Bastian was arrested in October 2006 after finishing his shift at the
Peace Arch border crossing.
Earlier, Vancouver prostitute Sandra Maas had been charged with
smuggling both marijuana and oxycodone into the U.S., always going
through Bastian's lane.
Maas testified at Bastian's trial, admitting that she would meet
Bastian for sex as payment for being allowed to enter the U.S. without
being searched.
Bastian had also been charged with conspiring with Maas to smuggle
drugs into the U.S., but a jury acquitted him of aiding in the
importation of the drugs and was deadlocked on several other counts.
According to U.S. prosecutors, Bastian first contacted Maas at her
Vancouver escort service sometime in 2001 or 2002.
At first, Bastian paid her for sex. But he later told her about his
job, at one point wearing his uniform to her brothel. And beginning in
late 2004, he received free sex in exchange for letting her cross the
border.
Maas bragged to her drug conspirators that she had a connection at the
border that allowed her to easily get her goods into the U.S.
During the trial, prosecutors presented phone calls taped by the
Canadian police in which Maas discussed with her drug supplier how her
contact had checked records and she was not flagged in the system for
inspection.
But Maas' and Bastian's deal fell apart on April 14, 2006, when Maas
was stopped at the border by another guard while Bastian was posted to
the truck crossing.
It was then that U.S. inspectors discovered nearly 3,000 vacuum-sealed
oxycodone pills hidden in Maas' bra and panties.
Maas was charged with importing narcotics but, in a plea bargain with
the U.S. government, agreed to testify against Bastian in exchange for
a two-year sentence.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Susan Roe told the court Monday it was "a sad
day at this courthouse when a federal official is being sentenced for
bribery."
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