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DEA doubtful of cartel order to stop fentanyl production

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From The Center Square

DEA officials remain skeptical of reports that Mexican cartel leaders have ordered their producers to stop making fentanyl.

In early 2023, the leaders of the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartelsĀ reportedlyĀ ordered subordinates to stop the production of fentanyl. In October 2023, Los Chapitos, theĀ group led by the four sons of imprisoned boss JoaquĆ­n “El Chapo” GuzmĆ”n, hung banners in prominent locations in Sinaloa, Sonora, and Baja California ordering the fentanyl ban.

DEA officials made it clear in the latestĀ National Drug Threat Assessment that they are doubtful.

“The ban is probably a public relations stunt, however, or an attempt by the cartels to consolidate production among a smaller number of trusted manufacturers and punish others,” according to the report.

Furthermore, DEA officials have seen no indication of a reduction in the illicit fentanyl supply.

“Throughout 2023, fentanyl was seized at the border in equal or higher quantities as in previous years, and no DEA field office reported that fentanyl is less available or more expensive, either of which would point to a decrease in the supply,” according to the report.

Illicit fentanyl killed nearly 38,000 Americans in the first six months of 2023, according to the DEA report. Synthetic opioids were involved in 74,225 deaths in 2022 ā€“ 68% of the total 111,036 deaths that year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

DEA officials said the cartels use precursor chemicals from China along with pill presses to press fentanyl into pills that resemble prescription medication. Cartels and street dealers also mix illicit fentanyl with other drugs including heroin and cocaine, increasing the risk of overdose or death.

The report also noted that theĀ purity levelĀ of illicit fentanyl in the U.S. drug market has increased and the amount of fentanyl found in counterfeit prescription pills has increased, making the nation’s top drug threat even more dangerous.

Seizures of fentanyl are at record levels, according to the report. Over the past two years seizures of fentanyl powder nearly doubled. DEA seized 29,048 pounds ofĀ fentanyl in 2023. And the more than 79 million fentanyl pills seized by DEA in 2023 was almost triple what was seized in 2021.

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2025 Federal Election

Canadian Banks Tied to Chinese Fentanyl Laundering Risk U.S. Treasury Sanctions After Cartel Terror Designation

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Sam Cooper

TD and other banks face new scrutiny under U.S. anti-terror laws as Chinese-linked superlabs in Canada churn out fentanyl, meth, and ecstasy for U.S. streets, expert tied to Trump administration warns

In an explosive, sweeping interview, former senior State Department investigator David Asherā€”closely connected to the Trump administrationā€™s financial and national security apparatusā€”warned that Canadian banks could soon face a ā€œnew universeā€ of regulatory scrutiny, including from the U.S. Treasury, due to the recent designation of Mexican cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.

Asher, who contends that the ā€œcommandā€ for Western Hemisphere money laundering of synthetic narcoticsā€”including fentanyl, methamphetamine, and ecstasy sourced from Chinese precursorsā€”is ā€œlargely run by Chinese triads in Canada,ā€ also argues that this interconnected transnational network presents profound risks to Canadian financial institutions.

Speaking bluntly about theĀ nexusĀ between Chinese Triads and Mexican cartels operating in Canada, Asher said: ā€œOf course, theyā€™re in bed with each other. This is why Tse Chi Lop lived in Torontoā€¦ These cartels are now designated as terrorist organizations. That changes everythingā€”how we prosecute them, and what tools we can use.ā€

Asher, along with Canadian law enforcement experts such as former RCMP intelligence analystĀ Scott McGregor,Ā believes a rarely discussed Canadian legal barrierā€”Stinchcombeā€”must be overcome. They argue Canada could unlock powerful new authorities if it begins treating cartel-connected Chinese money laundering networks as accessories to terrorism.

The rule, derived from the 1991 Supreme Court caseĀ R. v. Stinchcombe, requires Canadian law enforcement to disclose nearly all investigative material to the defense. While intended to ensure a fair trial, critics say it severely hampers complex RCMP investigations, especially those relying on wiretaps or sensitive intelligence, and risks blowing the cover of international partners and covert operations.

Asher didnā€™t mince words: ā€œEvery case I worked in Canadaā€¦ the Stinchcombe thing ended up [inhibiting investigations]ā€”we were targeting phone numbers tied to Canadian money launderers who were Chinese. And they got told after 90 days that we were going after them. Then they just changed numbers and changed their OPSEC. Itā€™s a farce.ā€

He sees the recent terrorism designation of Mexican cartels as a legal pivot point: ā€œThat whole Stinchcombe thing should be thrown out the door because we can now use counter-terrorism authorities.ā€

Asher believes that if Canadian law enforcement engages more directly with U.S. authorities, the financiers and money launderers tied to Chinese triads in Canada can be directly linked to fentanyl-trafficking Mexican cartels. If Canadian banks are shown to be facilitating these funds, even passively, they may be subject to U.S. regulationsā€”including terrorism finance sanctions.

The implications for Canadian institutions are profound. ā€œIf any of these financial institutions are picking up a dollar for the cartels at this stage and we can prove it, then theyā€™re engaged in terrorism financing.ā€

Asher also pointed to marijuana trafficking from Canada into the United Statesā€”not as a separate criminal enterprise, but as part of the same transnational fentanyl networks. He said Chinese Triads, with ties to the Chinese Communist Party, sit atop this narcotics pyramid and are exploiting Canadaā€™s legal marijuana system.

ā€œThe illegal potā€”marijuana from Canada that comes into the New York State tri-state area and into the Pacific Northwest states of the United StatesĀ is huge.Ā And now weā€™re seeing the integration of fentanyl into marijuana in some cases.ā€

The flow of narcotics south and criminal proceeds north continues largely unabated, Asher warned, with superlabs in British Columbia and other areas of Canada producing meth, ecstasy, and fentanyl.

On Canadaā€™s enforcement efforts and the outcomes of official inquiries into Chinese criminal and influence networks, Asher was scathing: ā€œWhat have you done to follow up on [the Cullen Commission]? Nothing. And then you had this Hogue inquiry about Chinese influence in politics. What have you done about that? It looks to me like practically nothing.ā€

He called on Canada to show resolve on investigations that impact the United States: ā€œFrankly, one of the first things you still need to do is: why is TD Bank Canada not being charged? And do we have charges against some of the executives, whether theyā€™ve been publicly named or not?ā€

His core message is that Canada must shake off legal andĀ political inertia:Ā ā€œWhy wouldnā€™t Canada want to protect itself? Youā€™re losing thousands of people every year, sometimes tens of thousands, due to overdoses and poisonings and basically murder in the form of these narcotics networks.ā€

The consequences of inaction, Asher warned, could be direā€”not only for Canadian sovereignty and public health, but for its banking sectorā€™s international standing. ā€œCanadian money laundering command and control remains a huge issue for drug trafficking across the United Statesā€¦ Thatā€™s just the bottom line.ā€

The following transcript has been edited for clarity and brevity. Some passages have been removed to streamline the discussion while preserving its core insights.

Sam Cooper:Ā What is the key change that designating the Sinaloa cartel and these other Mexican cartels as terrorist networksā€”because Canada followed President Trump on that. So now this anti-terrorism law should be applicable in Canada. One, does that change the calculus of the U.S. working with the Canadian government in going after cartels in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal? And two, in your view, are these cartels operative with Chinese command-and-control financiers that underwrite their operations across North America?

David Asher:Ā First of all, of course, theyā€™re in bed with each other. I mean, this is the reason why Tse Chi Lop lived in Canada and in Toronto. I mean, the Sinaloa cartel has significant operations with partners and proxies in Canada, both for distribution and, increasingly, we believe with productionā€”the rise of these super labs.

And so, the way I define it: we can do law enforcement top down. We use their intelligence, use their sources. We know who the leadership are, we know where the money is. Rather than build a case from the bottom up and start with dime bags on the streets of Chicago or Vancouver, we say we know these cartels are designated, and now these cartels are terrorist organizations. That changes everything in terms of how we could prosecute them and what type of tools we can use. Because that wholeĀ StinchcombeĀ thing should be thrown out the door because we can now use counter-terrorism authorities. Because Canada does have a reasonably strong counter-terrorism law.

So if we treat these cartels as terroristsā€”which they areā€”and youā€™ve designated them, we can use our signals intelligence and all sorts of other tools to much more robustly target them without them knowing it. Because every case I worked in Canada, theĀ StinchcombeĀ thing ended upā€”we were targeting phone numbers tied to Canadian money launderers who were Chinese, and also actually some Italian mob guys too, and Iranian mob guys. And they got told after 90 days that we were going after them. And then they just changed numbers and they changed their OPSEC. Itā€™s a farce, you know that. But I mean, just like with the terrorism designations, I think weā€™re in a new universe here.

So now that the Latin cartels have been designated as terrorists, your Anti-Terrorism Act of 2017 willā€”it has these four key provisions: prevent terrorists from getting into Canada and protect Canadians from terrorist acts; activate tools to identify, prosecute, and convict terrorists; keep the border secure and contribute to economic security; and work with the international community to bring terrorists to justice and address root causes of violence.

All these aspects are fundamentally game changers. I mean, if you apply that, I think that you treat these cartels as terrorists, you start to prosecute them. We could do it jointly. And their partners tooā€”I mean, theyā€™re accessories to terrorism. So if the Chinese are laundering the money, and if TD Bank, letā€™s say, is accepting the money? Then TD Bank is involved in terrorism finance. Suddenly, then, the whole tapestry of authorities has changed, and we should not have to follow theĀ StinchcombeĀ thing anymore. It should be that we have a direct way to secretly target the communications and follow the money through the cartels, now that theyā€™re basically the same as Hezbollah and the Quds Force and Al-Qaeda.

And then thereā€™s Chinese partners. Frankly, if theyā€™re working with them in a partnership, you should be able to approach them as accessories to terrorism from a legal standpoint. That would change your prosecution. It would change your intelligence collection capability, and it would actually conform with the facts, frankly.

And I think also anybody whoā€™s getting the Chinese guys youā€™ve profiled, like Paul King Jin and all these Chinese United Front actors in Vancouverā€”I mean, they are now effectively accessories to a terrorist organizationā€™s finances.

So I have to assumeĀ that your politiciansĀ are not going to meet with accessories to terrorist organizations anymore. I hope what this is doing in the U.S. is that all U.S. banks now are under warning that the Anti-Terrorism Act will be applied to them if they take one dollar of Sinaloa money.

I think that people are starting to realize that. And I think thereā€™s muchā€”I think itā€™s hardly that TD was the only Canadian bank that was involved in laundering money.

Sam Cooper:Ā Can you expand on that?

David Asher:Ā Youā€™ve got other banks, like BMO. Iā€™m not saying itā€™s laundering money, but Iā€™m not saying it isnā€™t. I donā€™t know, but they have huge operations in Mexico, so obviously they should be looked at. But if any of these financial institutions are picking up a dollar for the cartels at this stage and we can prove it, then theyā€™re engaged in terrorism financing. I mean, the U.S. government will go after banks anywhere in the world that are engaged in terrorism financing, Canadian or otherwise.

And I donā€™t think the U.S. government is satisfied at all with the Canadian response at this stage. But there is great hope because if you start to crack down using your Anti-Terrorism Act, I think that we have an opportunity to change the framework for collective action and have a much better relationship.

But itā€™s going to mean taking on the Chinese because the money laundering for terrorist dollars is material support for terrorism, and itā€™s going to require going after the distribution of not just fentanyl, but letā€™s not forget thereā€™s massive amounts of methamphetamine produced in Canada. And by the way, no oneā€™s talking about all the meth from Canada thatā€™s entering the United States. President Trump isnā€™t just concerned about fentanyl. I mean, for years weā€™ve had methamphetamine coming out of Canada into the United States.

Sam Cooper:Ā Well, I recently did a story on aĀ major Sinaloa Cartel cellĀ set up on the British Columbia border near the Peace Arch crossing. They were dealing with [Sinaloa Cartel boss] El Mayo directly, which says a lot, right?

And they were raidedā€“mind you no one is even incarceratedā€”but they face civil forfeiture. And they found Mexican passports, fentanyl, MDMA, methamphetamine, ketamine, fake Xanax, incredible weapons caches. And youĀ alsoĀ just had another major smuggling operation of MDMA from B.C. justĀ prosecutedĀ in Washington state. So the U.S. government is concerned with all these precursors from China and that includes ecstasy as well, right?

David Asher:Ā Yes. And of course, the illegal potā€”marijuana from Canada that comes into the New York State tri-state area and into the Pacific Northwest states of the United States is huge. And now weā€™re seeing the integration of fentanyl into marijuana in some cases.

I think that the Canadian defense that statistics show Canada is innocent in fentanyl trafficking across North America is just bullshit. I mean, something like probably 80% of the money laundering networks in the U.S. that are Chinese are in direct contact with numbers in Canada every day. And we donā€™t know who those subscribers are. Weā€™re not allowed to spy on Canada.

Sam Cooper:Ā Alright. Can I ask you this? I heard from a senior U.S. narcotics expert with deep knowledge that the pot being run down from Ontario into New York and the tri-state area was coming inĀ tonsĀ ā€” and that they believed this was command-and-control Chinese organized crime in Toronto. They said the fundsĀ connected to allĀ of that was collected in the U.S. and ultimately coming back up to Toronto banks.

Like you said, the money comes back to be laundered where command is. So that’s the legalā€”or really, illegalā€”pot trade from Canada, mixed with the fentanyl trafficking networks directed from Canada. The drugs go south, the cash is collected, and itā€™s laundered back up through Canadian banks.

Thatā€™s your TD Bank case, right?

David Asher:Ā Itā€™s all part of the same drug trafficking organizations.

But look, we donā€™t have super labs in the United States, and this idea that, well, we have super labs in Canada, but theyā€™re not targeting the United Statesā€”how the hell do you know that? I mean, you just stumbled upon this super lab out in British Columbia. How many others? Weā€™ve heard from dozens of sources that there are a number of labs like that in Canada. I mean, thereā€™s no way theyā€™re not going to be involved in exporting to the United States.

But even if they arenā€™t, itā€™s a huge threat to Canada. And we have to assume that itā€™s an incoming threat to the United States. But putting aside fentanyl super labs, youā€™ve got super methamphetamine labs too, and youā€™ve got the marijuana business, ecstasy businessā€”itā€™s all drug business. Theyā€™re all interlinked. And letā€™s not forget that Tse Chi Lop served, I donā€™t know about nine years in prison in the United States. We arrested him well before he was identified publicly, and when he was based in Canada.

You showed in your bookĀ Wilful BlindnessĀ that Paul King Jin, all these guys come down to Las Vegas to launder money. Remember, you can take these chips from these casinos and you can exchange them internationally. Theyā€™re like bearer bonds practically. You can take them and settle them elsewhere. The chips are fungible. So the idea that these major Chinese networks in Canada are not cross-border into the U.S. is also bullshit.

Sam Cooper:Ā Absolutely, yes.

David Asher:Ā Thatā€™s not some secret. Everybody knows that who works organized crime cases. So whatā€™s going on in British Columbia, which your Cullen CommissionĀ reporting detailedĀ in mind-altering detail. What has Canada done to follow up on that? Nothing. And then you had this Hogue inquiry about Chinese influence in politics. What has Canada done about that? It looks to me like practically nothing. I think thereā€™s a lot we can do though. And there are people in the Canadian government that want to work this positively, and I think there should be more receptivity to it in the United States.

But I think weā€™d like to see the Canadians put some meat on the plate. Can they help us target the Sinaloa cartelā€™s operations in partnership with Chinese triads, not just in Canada, but in the U.S. too, and maybe even in Mexico?

I mean, have they come forward with a plan of attack together? I donā€™t think so. And if they did, it would be helpful. But frankly, one of the first things you still need to do is: why is TD Bank Canada not being charged?

And do we have charges against some of the executives, whether theyā€™ve been publicly named or not? Itā€™s in the document that the Department of Justice released that there were a number of people theyā€™ve identified for criminal prosecution. I mean, in the U.S. weā€™re fining TD $3.1 billion. Whatā€™s Canada done? Like aĀ $9 million fineĀ against TD Corporate in Toronto. Seriously? The people in Toronto were running the money laundering network in the United States of America.

Sam Cooper:Ā What more can you say about that piece?

David Asher:Ā There are other people you should talk to about that. But we know there was command and control for the money laundering in Toronto. Thatā€™s why the CEO of TD Canada resigned. He took the blame, but he hasnā€™t been charged. I expect that that case has not ended yet. I think thereā€™s a high probability that it will be continuing. I donā€™t know this for certainā€”Iā€™m not involvedā€”but from what I can see, the facts are pretty clear in the document that was put out by the Department of Justice. I donā€™t think that thereā€™s grounds for this investigation into TDā€™s money laundering activity at the headquarters level to stop.

But why isnā€™t the Canadian government looking into them? This is the largest money laundering bank in the history of the United States of America. Itā€™s Canadian. Have you ever thought that you guys might be able to charge them for money laundering too? What about anything theyā€™re doing today?

At this point, I know theyā€™ve hired people as consultants to try to supposedly clean up the bank, but you know what? Theyā€™ve got a long way to go. They have to close accounts. Theyā€™ve got to screen every relationship theyā€™ve got. And even then, if the Department of the Treasury is satisfied, the Department of Justice might have a different view of it.

But I think that we know this: at the end of the day, the Canadian money laundering command and control remains a huge issue for drug trafficking of all sorts across the United States of America. And so I think thatā€™s just the bottom line.

Sam Cooper:Ā Okay. Letā€™s talk more aboutĀ StinchcombeĀ and Canadaā€™s courts and cross-border crime, because this is a major cause of friction fundamentally for Canada and the U.S. as allies I believe.

Can you explain more about the extreme impediments that Canadian police work under, so that U.S. international enforcement is totally frustrated, loss of confidence, canā€™t work with Canada. Could you briefly describe to the readers whatĀ StinchcombeĀ means in terms of your and the U.S. governmentā€™s frustration in not being able to go up on [establish wiretaps] on Iranian, Chinese, and Mexican operatives in Canada?

David Asher:Ā Well, we could go up on them, but then they had to be told we were going up on them. I mean, thereā€™s this disclosure rule. Iā€™m not an expert on Canadian law, but I can tell you that we had multiple casesā€”including [Asher names an alleged Iran-regime connected criminal in Toronto that allegedly laundered several billion dollars in major Canadian banks] against the Iran network.

We actually did have a case into Tse Chi Lop as well that was significant with the Australians, but it was DEA-led. And weā€™ve had so many others, including against the Hells Angels of Canada, who were a big problem. I mean, those guys, theyā€™ve been trafficking into the United States. And as far as I can understand it, every time we want to target someone, they end up getting told that theyā€™re being targeted. I mean, you canā€™t build an undercover criminal investigation if the cover gets blown after 90 days because of some Canadian law or rule.

And the fact is, but now with this terrorism designation, at least when it comes to the cartels and their facilitating partiesā€”and that could be the Hells Angels, that could be the Wolf Pack, that could be the Chinese triadsā€”it doesnā€™t really matter. Theyā€™re facilitating terrorism.

And Canada would need to start to make cases on your own to identify, prosecute, and disable and dismantle these networks. Your government knows where these networks exist. It just acts like itā€™s powerless to do anything. Itā€™s just not true. Iā€™ve always felt that there was a compromiseā€”because we were dealing with, in some of these Iran cases, we were dealing with terrorism. We had direct Hezbollah and Iranian IRGC connections in Canada. So it baffled us why the criminals were being told that they were being targeted or how they found out.

Whether it was throughĀ StinchcombeĀ or leaks or whatever. But all I can say is: whenā€™s the last time we did a major case together between U.S. and Canada to take down a network? Seriously? Can you name one?

Sam Cooper:Ā I canā€™t. No.

David Asher:Ā Exactly. So thereā€™s none, basically, thatā€™s of any note. And itā€™s not just to blame Canada. Iā€™m saying letā€™s just turn this into an opportunity for justice, because at the end of the day, your people are getting murdered by these cartels. And the cartels are making money because they can launder through these Chinese networks. And if they canā€™t make money, theyā€™ll go out of business. So our job is not to protect Canada, but weā€™re certainly happy to help.

But I think that this needs to beā€”and itā€™s unfortunate that things have started off in an adversarial way between Washington and Ottawa. But I think that thereā€™s just a lot of frustration. And I know it exists at the Treasury Department, not just the Department of Justice.

Youā€™ve got a ways to go, and I think that your new Prime Minister will hopefully be able to navigate this, and weā€™ll see a new way of working these things together.

And I think, again, this terrorism designation is huge, but someone has to start by saying, okay, now weā€™ve got a terrorism designation. What do we do with it? And right now, I donā€™t think you should wait for the U.S. to come and complain or appeal to you to do it. You should do this yourselves. Why wouldnā€™t Canada want to protect itself? Youā€™re losing thousands of people every year, sometimes tens of thousands, due to overdoses and poisonings and basically murder in the form of these narcotics networks. And then, basically, youā€™ve created a countrywide environment thatā€™s permissive to criminal organizations, and people are suffering. The fact is, this enormous amount of real estate thatā€™s been bought across Canada, especially in British Columbia and the Toronto area, has been bought with money thatā€™s been laundered. It makes Miami in the 1980s look minor league.

Sam Cooper:Ā Yeah. The estimates I’m getting now are over a trillion dollars in Toronto and Vancouver, connected to mortgage fraud and underground banking since 2010.

David Asher:Ā Yeah, itā€™s massive. And it has to be fixed. I mean, seriously, this is an opportunity.

Sam Cooper:Ā Itā€™s an opportunity to improve both our nations.

David Asher:Ā Correct. And I think if Canada came forward and said, we just identified the following networks and individuals who are laundering money for Chinese money laundering organizations, and weā€™re going to take them down, the U.S. would probably be impressed. Right now, youā€™re showing videos of dogs on the border and helicoptersā€”that doesnā€™t do anything. Make some arrests, take down some criminals.

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Addictions

Should fentanyl dealers face manslaughter charges for fatal overdoses?

Published on

Tyler Ginn prior to his death from a fentanyl overdose in 2021. [Photo credit: Gayle Fowlie]

By Alexandra Keeler

Police are charging more drug dealers with manslaughter in fentanyl overdose deaths. But the shift is not satisfying everyone

Four years ago, Tyler Ginn died of a fentanyl overdose at the age of 18. Tylerā€™s father found his son unresponsive in the bedroom of their Brooklin, Ont., home.

For Tylerā€™s mother, Gayle Fowlie, the pain of his loss remains raw.

ā€œHe was my kid that rode his bike to the store to buy me a chocolate bar on my birthday, you know?ā€ she told Canadian Affairs in an interview.

Police charged Jacob Norn, the drug dealer who sold Tyler his final, fatal dose, with manslaughter. More than three years after Tylerā€™s death, Norn was convicted and sentenced to six years in prison.

ā€œI donā€™t think you can grasp how difficult going through a trial is,ā€ Fowlie said. ā€œOn TV, itā€™s a less than an hour process. But the pain of it, and going over every detail and then going over every detail again ā€¦ it provides details you wish you didnā€™t know.ā€

But Fowlie is glad Norn was convicted. If anything, she would have liked him to serve a longer sentence. Lawyers have told her Norn is likely to serve only two to four years of his sentence in prison.

ā€œMy sonā€™s never coming back [and] his whole family has a life sentence of missing him the rest of our lives,ā€ she said. ā€œSo do I think four years is fair? No.ā€

Nornā€™s case reflects a growing trend of drug dealers being charged with manslaughter when their drug sales lead to fatal overdoses.

But this shift has not satisfied everyone. Some would like to see drug dealers face harsher or different penalties.

ā€œIf we say that it was 50 per cent Tylerā€™s fault for buying it and 50 per cent Jacobā€™s fault for selling it ā€¦ then I think he should have a half-a-life sentence,ā€ said Fowlie.

Others say the legal systemā€™s focus on prosecuting low-level drug dealers misses the broader issues at play.

ā€œ[Police] decided, in the Jacob Norn case, they were going to go one stage back,ā€ said Peter Thorning, who was Nornā€™s defence lawyer.

ā€œWhat about the person who gave Jacob that substance? What about the person who supplied the substance to [that person]? There was no investigation into where it came from and who was ultimately responsible for the death of that young man.ā€

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Manslaughter charge

At least 50,000 Canadians have died from drug overdoses since 2016. Last year, an average of 21 individuals died each day, with fentanyl accounting for nearly 80 per cent of those deaths.

Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, is up to 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine. A dose as small as a few grains of salt can be lethal.

Given its potency, police and prosecutors have increasingly turned to manslaughter charges when a dealerā€™s product results in a fatal overdose.

A recentĀ studyĀ in the Canadian Journal of Law and Society found that the number of manslaughter charges laid for drug-related deaths in Canada surged from three cases in 2016 to 135 in 2021.

Individuals can be convicted of manslaughter for committing unlawful, reckless or negligent acts that result in death but where there was no intention to kill. Sentences can range from probation (in rare cases) to life.

Murder charges, by contrast, require an intent to kill or cause fatal harm. Drug dealers typically face manslaughter charges in overdose cases, as their intent is to distribute drugs, not to kill those who purchase them.

Joanne Bortoluss, a spokesperson for the Durham Regional Police, which charged Norn, said that each of their investigations follows the same fundamental process.

ā€œInvestigators consider the strength of the evidence, the dealerā€™s level of involvement, and applicable laws when determining whether to pursue charges like manslaughter,ā€ she said.

The Canadian Journal of Law and Society study also found that prosecutions often target low-level dealers, many of whom are drug users themselves and have personal connections to the deceased.

Nornā€™s caseĀ fits this pattern. He struggled with substance abuse, including addiction to fentanyl, Xanax and Percocet. Tyler and Norn were friends, the judge said in the court ruling, although Fowlie disputes this claim.

ā€œ[Those words] are repulsive to me,ā€ she said.

The Crown argued Norn demonstrated ā€œa high degree of moral blameworthinessā€ by warning Ginn of the fentanylā€™s potency while still selling it to him. In a call to Ginn, he warned him ā€œnot to do a lot of the stuffā€ because he ā€œdidnā€™t want to be responsible for anything that happened.ā€

Fowlieā€™s outrage over Nornā€™s lenient sentencing is compounded by the fact that Norn was found traffickingĀ fentanyl again after her sonā€™s death.

ā€œSo weā€™ve killed somebody, and weā€™re still ā€¦ trafficking? Weā€™re not worried who else we kill?ā€ Fowlie said.

Trafficking

Some legal sources noted that manslaughter charges do not necessarily lead to harsh sentences or deterrence.

ā€œIf you look at how diverse and ā€¦ lenient some sentences are for manslaughter, I donā€™t think it really pushes things in the direction that [victimsā€™ families] want,ā€ said Kevin Westell, a Vancouver-based trial lawyer and former chair of the Canadian Bar Association.

Westell noted that the term ā€œmanslaughterā€ is misleading. ā€œManslaughter is a brutal-sounding title, but it encapsulates a very broad span of criminal offences,ā€ he said.

In Westellā€™s view, consistently charging dealers with drug trafficking could be more effective for deterring the practice.

ā€œWhat really matters is how long the sentence is, and youā€™re better off saying, ā€˜We know fentanyl is dangerous, so weā€™re setting the sentence quite high,ā€™ rather than making it harder to prove with a manslaughter charge,ā€ he said.

Trafficking is a distinct charge from manslaughter that involves the distribution, sale or delivery of illicit drugs. The sentencing range for fentanyl trafficking is eight to 15 years, Kwame Bonsu, a media relations representative for the Department of Justice, told Canadian Affairs.

ā€œCourts must impose sentences that are proportionate to the gravity of the offence and the degree of responsibility of the offender,ā€ Bonsu said, referencing a 2021 Supreme Court of Canada decision. Bonsu noted that aggravating factors such as lack of remorse or trafficking large quantities can lead to harsher sentences.

ā€˜Head of the snakeā€™

Some legal experts noted the justice system often fails to target those higher up in the drug supply chain.

ā€œWe donā€™t know how many hands that drug goes through,ā€ said Thorning, the defence lawyer.

ā€œAre the police going to prosecute every single person who provides fentanyl to another person? Jacob [Norn] was himself an addict trafficker ā€” what about the person who supplied the substance to him?ā€

Thorning also questioned whether governmentĀ agenciesĀ bear some responsibility. ā€œIs some government agencyā€™s failure to investigate how that drug came into the country partly responsible for the young manā€™s death?ā€

Westell, who has served as both a Crown prosecutor and criminal defence lawyer, acknowledged the difficulty of targeting higher-level traffickers.

ā€œCutting off the head of the snake does not align very well with the limitations of the international borders,ā€ he said.

ā€œYes, there are transnational justice measures, but a lot gets lost, and as soon as you cross an international border of any kind, it becomes incredibly difficult to follow the chain in a linear way.ā€

Bortoluss, of the Durham police, said even prosecuting what appear to be obvious fentanyl-related deaths ā€” such as Tyler Ginnā€™s ā€” can be challenging. Witnesses can be reluctant to cooperate, fearing legal consequences. It can also be difficult to identify the source of drugs, as ā€œtransactions often involve multiple intermediaries and anonymous online sales.ā€

Another challenge in deterring fentanyl trafficking is the strong financial incentives of the trade.

ā€œEven if [Norn] serves two to four years for killing somebody, but he could make a hundred thousand off of selling drugs, is it worth it?ā€ Fowlie said.

Thorning agreed that the profit incentive can be incredibly powerful, outweighing the risk of a potential sentence.

ā€œThe more risky you make the behaviour, the greater the profit for a person whoā€™s willing to break our laws, and the profit is the thing that generates the conduct,ā€ he said.

A blunt instrument

Legal experts also noted the criminal justice system alone cannot solve the fentanyl crisis.

ā€œMost people who have [lost] a loved one [to drug overdose] want to see a direct consequence to the person thatā€™s responsible,ā€ said Westell. ā€œBut I think they would also like to see something on a more macro level that helps eliminate the problem more holistically, and that canā€™t be [achieved through] crime and punishment alone.ā€

Thorning agrees.

ā€œThese are mental health .. [and] medical issues,ā€ he said. ā€œCriminal law is a blunt instrument [that is] not going to deal with these things effectively.ā€

Even Fowlie sees the problem as bigger than sentencing. Her son struggled with the stigma associated with therapy and medication, which made it difficult for him to seek help.

ā€œWe need to normalize seeing a therapist, like we normalize getting your eyes checked every year,ā€ she said.

ā€œPot isnā€™t the gateway drug, trauma is a gateway drug.ā€


This article was produced through the Breaking Needles Fellowship Program, which provided a grant toĀ Canadian Affairs, a digital media outlet, to fund journalism exploring addiction and crime in Canada. Articles produced through the Fellowship are co-published by Break The Needle and Canadian Affairs.


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