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Convicted cocaine trafficker was not a key part of Yellowknife drug ring, N.W.T. judge rules

A convicted drug dealer from Yellowknife was not selling enough cocaine to warrant being labelled a "commercial trafficker" and instead sold drugs to feed her own addiction, an N.W.T. Supreme Court judge ruled.

Judge rules she wasn't convinced Serenus Bryan warrants being labelled a 'commercial trafficker'

Serenus Bryan will be sentenced on Jan. 7. (CBC)

A convicted drug dealer from Yellowknife was not selling enough cocaine to warrant being labelled a "commercial trafficker" and instead sold drugs to feed her own addiction, an N.W.T. Supreme Court judge ruled. 

Tuesday, lawyers for the Crown and defence presented their cases on the scale of Serenus Bryan's drug dealing.

Bryan is one of about 30 people arrested in 2016 as part of a large-scale "dial-a-dope" drug network in Yellowknife. 

Crown prosecutors argued she was an essential part of a widespread drug-trafficking network, while her defence lawyers said Bryan only sold drugs to her partner and to feed her own addictions. 

In her ruling, N.W.T. Supreme Court Justice Karan Shaner sided with the defence, ruling the Crown failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Bryan was a high-level drug dealer.

Bryan was convicted by an 11-person jury Nov. 2 of trafficking cocaine. The same jury found her not guilty of trafficking fentanyl.

Bryan's role in drug operation in question

After Tuesday morning's session Crown prosecutor Duane Praught said Bryan could face more than two years in prison if she was convicted of "commercial trafficking." 

But because of Shaner's ruling in the afternoon, Bryan will likely serve a lighter sentence. 

A sentencing date will be scheduled at another hearing on Jan. 7.