British Columbia

MV Ocean Lady human smuggling case hears final arguments

Lawyers for four men accused of human smuggling are expected to deliver closing arguments today at the trial in Vancouver.

4 men accused in bringing 76 Sri Lankan asylum seekers to the West Coast of Vancouver Island in 2009

Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper on the ship MV Ocean Lady for a photo opportunity in Delta, B.C. Monday, Feb 21, 2011.The MV Ocean Lady, which was carrying illegal migrants to Canada, was seized and towed into a port in Victoria, B.C. by the Navy on Oct 17, 2009. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

Lawyers for four men accused of human smuggling are expected to deliver closing arguments today at the trial in Vancouver.

The four were charged after a decrepit cargo vessel, the MV Ocean Lady, carried 76 Sri Lankan asylum seekers from Thailand to the West Coast of Vancouver Island in the fall of 2009.

On Tuesday Crown prosecutor Maggie Loda told a B.C Supreme Court trial that the four men who orchestrated the dangerous trans-Pacific trek for the dozens of Tamil asylum seekers were simply out for profit.

In her closing arguments Loda said the accused men held a more privileged position on board the MV Ocean Lady.

The high court had earlier ordered a new trial for the men, after ruling the federal government's laws on human smuggling shouldn't apply to those who help migrants on humanitarian grounds.

Loda told the court that while there is no evidence the accused men made money out of the scheme, they should be convicted for smuggling the vulnerable migrants who paid thousands for the trip.