Halifax drug dealer sentenced to 3 years in prison - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 12:44 AM | Calgary | -0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Halifax drug dealer sentenced to 3 years in prison

A Halifax man who was the subject of a high-speed police chase through the citys west end three years ago has been sentenced to 3 years in prison for drug trafficking.

Cameron Mombourquette had pleaded guilty to several charges that included drug trafficking

A small, bronze statue of a woman wearing a blindfold and holding a scale.
A Halifax man has been sentenced to 3years in prison for drug trafficking. (Belenos/Shutterstock)

A Halifax man who was the subject of a high-speed police chase through the city's west end three years ago has been sentenced to 3years in prison for drug trafficking.

Cameron Mombourquette, 26, was sentenced in Nova Scotia provincial court Thursday.

He had earlier pleaded guilty to charges that included drug trafficking, possession of property obtained by crime, and possession of a prohibited weapon.

The weapon was a handgun that had been thrown from the passenger-side window of Mombourquette's vehicle during the police chase. The gun included an illegal, oversized magazine.

Police also found 500 grams of cocaine and 97 pills containing heroin. Police also found $1,550 in cash when they searched his vehicle and another $5,052 at his home, along with a one-ounce gold bar.

Court was told Mombourquette's income was solely derived from drug traffickingat the time of his arrest in December2020.His vehicle was even equipped with a secret compartment to facilitate moving drugs around the city.

The Crown asked for a sentence of six years.

But Judge Elizabeth Buckle said there were several factors that warranted a lesser sentence. They included the fact that he was a first-time offender, that he pleaded guilty without a trial and that he hasturned his life around since his arrest, abstaining from drugs and breaking all contact with people he knew in the drug trade.

Mombourquette's family packed the courtroom for his sentencing.

"I realize this is not a happy day for you," Buckle said as she concluded her sentencing. "It doesn't have to be the end."