Windsor

Windsor man receives prison sentence for smuggling drugs through Detroit River

A Windsor man who was found unconscious and tethered to 84 kilograms of marijuana in the Detroit River was sentenced Wednesday to about six years in a U.S. prison.

Judge sentenced Glen Mousseau to about 6 years in U.S. prison

Trucks traverse the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor on July 5, 2020. (REUTERS/Carlos Osorio) (Carlos Osorio/Reuters)

A Windsor man who was found unconscious and tethered to 84 kilograms of marijuana in the Detroit River was sentenced Wednesday to about six years in a U.S. prison.

The capture of Glen Mousseau last June capped a strange few weeks in his dealings with U.S. law enforcement. The case also revealed extraordinary steps that his smuggling operation took to move drugs and cash between the two countries, even using Seabobs, a watercraft that can propel people underwater.

"The international nature of the smuggling here is noteworthy and in many ways more alarming than the run-of-the-mill drug distribution conspiracy," U.S. District Judge Robert Cleland said.

Mousseau was first stopped in May while driving a rental truck in St. Clair County, Michigan, and possessing roughly US$100,000. The government said he confessed to being a smuggler who served various criminal groups.

Investigators said Mousseau quickly agreed to help agents in a methamphetamine bust. But he fled a hotel, leaving behind phones, a laptop and a diving suit, and somehow dashed back to Canada.

He turned up two weeks later in the overnight darkness of the Detroit River as border agents pursued a suspicious boat. Carefully wrapped packages weighing 120 kilograms were tied to Mousseau, including marijuana totalling about 84 kilograms

"He was a mule. That's all his participation was," defence attorney Victor Mansour said. "He was the one who was thrown into the water. He almost died."

Mousseau sorry and 'ashamed'

But the government noted that Mousseau, 49, has a 32-year criminal record in Canada.

"Unfortunately, age has not mitigated the defendant's propensity to commit crimes," Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Goulding said.

Mousseau urged the judge to "see some good in me." His lawyer asked for a 3 1/2-year sentence, but Cleland chose about six years.

"I have done illegal things for money, and I am sorry and ashamed. ... I have taken shortcuts and agreed to do illegal things to support my family financially," Mousseau said.

Border agents took a photo of the large marijuana bundles and nicknamed him "Scuba Steve" on social media. One of Mousseau's Seabobs was found on Zug Island in the Detroit River.