J-Tornado drug trial finds suspects guilty on all counts
CBC News | Posted: September 19, 2016 12:00 PM | Last Updated: September 19, 2016
2 Saint John men found guilty on charges of drug possession, trafficking and conspiracy
Two Saint John men have been found guilty on all charges in the J-Tornado trial, which delved into the the drug-dealing world in Saint John and New Brunswick.
Shane Williams, 34, and Joshua Kindred, 29, were found guilty Monday by Court of Queen's Bench Justice William Grant on charges of drug possession, drug trafficking and conspiracy.
The two men were jointly on trial for drug possession, drug trafficking and conspiracy. The trial lasted 65 days.
- J-Tornado drug trial hears closing arguments by defence
- Crown closes case in J-Tornado trial after 65 days
Kindred was found guilty on five charges, including trafficking cocaine, possession of cocaine, conspiring to traffic drugs, conspiring to possess drugs for a the purpose of trafficking, and benefiting from a criminal organization.
Williams was found guilty on the same five charges plus two others: instructing others for the benefit of a criminal organization, possession of the proceeds of crime of more than $5,000.
Court will reconvene Wednesday to deal with a closing argument allegation by Williams's lawyer that his client was entrapped by police.
A sentencing date has not been set.
The two were among 28 arrested by police in September 2014 as part of Operation J-Tornado, a three-year long investigation into drug trafficking in New Brunswick.
Police managed to put dozens of RCMP-supplied BlackBerry devices into the hands of New Brunswick drug suspects using a paid agent, a Saint John businessman whose name is protected by a publication ban.
The suspects were led to believe the phones were encrypted and immune to police surveillance.
Instead, emails from the phones were routed directly through RCMP servers, with over 30,000 messages intercepted and analysed by police.
Two phones
The Crown has established that cocaine activity in the group was largely directed by two phones, one connected to the email address ferrarigang@cryplock.net and one connected to hummertime@cryplock.net.
Crown prosecutors Nicole Poirier and Melanie Ferron presented evidence in the judge alone trial over 65 non-consecutive days.
At one point the trial was so behind schedule that they were even sitting on weekends.
The defence — Brian Munro, representing Williams, 34, of Smithtown, and Reid Chedore, representing Kindred, 39, of Saint John — called three witnesses during the trial and presented closing arguments in mid-August.
Both lawyers told Justice Grant the Crown had not proven its case against their clients, telling the court there is no proof the two men ever had the phones or that the agent had given the phones to them.
Mid-trial, Grant acknowledged two issues central to the case are: the overall credibility of the businessman-turned-police agent, and whether police gathered enough evidence to prove Williams and Kindred were behind the emails sent by "ferrarigang" and "hummertime."
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