News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: BC Men Who Dug Drug Tunnel To US Sentenced To Nine Years |
Title: | US WA: BC Men Who Dug Drug Tunnel To US Sentenced To Nine Years |
Published On: | 2006-07-15 |
Source: | National Post (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-18 06:26:17 |
B.C. MEN WHO DUG DRUG TUNNEL TO U.S. SENTENCED TO NINE YEARS
VANCOUVER - Three B.C. men who dug a drug-smuggling tunnel under the
U.S.-Canada border were sentenced yesterday to nine years in jail in
U.S. District Court in Seattle. The sentence imposed on Francis
Devandra Raj, 31, Timothy Woo, 35, and Jonathan Valenzuela, 28, all of
Surrey, B.C., was nearly double the term requested by defence lawyers,
said Emily Langley of the United States Attorney's Office. According
to Ms. Langley, the defence had asked the judge to consider a
mandatory minimum sentence of five years for their clients, all of
whom pleaded guilty earlier this year to a charge of conspiracy to
import marijuana.
Federal prosecutors, however, argued the scope and sophistication of
the men's smuggling efforts required a stronger legal response.
In a written sentencing memorandum, assistant U.S. attorneys Jill
Otake, Annette Hayes and Doug Walley said the tunnel posed a serious
threat to national security.
Raj, Woo and Valenzuela were arrested last July, shortly after they
completed the 110-metre-long tunnel, pictured, between Aldergrove,
B.C., and Lynden, Wash. The tunnel ran from the living room of a home
on the U.S. side to a boarded-up Quonset hut on the Canadian side.
After three pot-running trips, Investigators shut down the tunnel on
July 20, 2005 and arrested the three men. Following their prison term,
all three men are subject to five years of supervised release.
Ms. Langley said the men must serve 85% of their sentences --
approximately 7 1/2 years -- before becoming eligible for parole.
The tunnel, meanwhile, has been filled in.
VANCOUVER - Three B.C. men who dug a drug-smuggling tunnel under the
U.S.-Canada border were sentenced yesterday to nine years in jail in
U.S. District Court in Seattle. The sentence imposed on Francis
Devandra Raj, 31, Timothy Woo, 35, and Jonathan Valenzuela, 28, all of
Surrey, B.C., was nearly double the term requested by defence lawyers,
said Emily Langley of the United States Attorney's Office. According
to Ms. Langley, the defence had asked the judge to consider a
mandatory minimum sentence of five years for their clients, all of
whom pleaded guilty earlier this year to a charge of conspiracy to
import marijuana.
Federal prosecutors, however, argued the scope and sophistication of
the men's smuggling efforts required a stronger legal response.
In a written sentencing memorandum, assistant U.S. attorneys Jill
Otake, Annette Hayes and Doug Walley said the tunnel posed a serious
threat to national security.
Raj, Woo and Valenzuela were arrested last July, shortly after they
completed the 110-metre-long tunnel, pictured, between Aldergrove,
B.C., and Lynden, Wash. The tunnel ran from the living room of a home
on the U.S. side to a boarded-up Quonset hut on the Canadian side.
After three pot-running trips, Investigators shut down the tunnel on
July 20, 2005 and arrested the three men. Following their prison term,
all three men are subject to five years of supervised release.
Ms. Langley said the men must serve 85% of their sentences --
approximately 7 1/2 years -- before becoming eligible for parole.
The tunnel, meanwhile, has been filled in.
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