Whitehorse drug trafficker Jesse Ritchie sentenced to 5 years - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:15 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Whitehorse drug trafficker Jesse Ritchie sentenced to 5 years

A Surrey, B.C., man who admits controlling a Whitehorse drug trafficking operation has been sentenced to five years in federal prison.

Convicted trafficker promises judge he'll never deal drugs again

Yukon RCMP Cpl. Calista MacLeod stands with some of the cocaine, marijuana and firearms seized in the November 2013 drug bust that led to Ritchie's arrest. (Heather Avery/CBC)

A Surrey, B.C., man who admitted operating a drug trafficking ring in Whitehorse has been given a five-year prison term.

Jesse Ritchie, 35, was sentenced in Yukon territorial court this morning after a joint submission from defence and crown prosecutors. He hadpleaded guilty last Novemberto possession ofmarijuana and cocaineor the purpose oftrafficking.

Ritchiewas one of fourmen arrested in November 2013 as part of a bust police calledone of the most significant organized crime investigations inYukon "Operation Monolith."

More than half a million dollars in drugs and money was seized.

Court was told howRitchie was once a high school sports star in the lower mainland with professional aspirations.

In 2005 he moved to Whitehorse and established a vitamin supplement retail operation,Fuel Flex.

Eight years later, an undercover RCMP operation exposed the illegal drug operation Ritchie controlled.

Guilty plea prevented long and expensive trial

In an agreed statement of facts, Ritchie admittedcontrolling one of Whitehorse's two primary drug trafficking rings.

Prosecutors referred to Ritchie as "a higher up" in the operation.

Evidence against himincluded a series of text messages betweenRitchieand a dealer-turned-police-informant,revealing plans to ship large quantities of cocaine and marijuanaand collect money.

Police also had photos of Ritchie retrieving $80,000 that had been buried in the bush off Grey Mountain Road.

Prosecutors now say his guilty plea saved thema long and expensive trial.

Letters from numerous friends and relatives say they support Ritchie's plans to turn his life around.

Ritchie stood in court this morning and confirmed that promise to the judge.