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Cannabis traffickers used cryptocurrency, ‘barrels of honey or maple syrup’ to cover tracks: Manitoba RCMP

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A 39-year-old Manitoba man and half a dozen others were arrested this summer and fall in connection with drug trafficking and money laundering schemes that involved cryptocurrency┬атАФ along with┬аsmuggling cannabis concentrate in and out of the country using barrels of honey and maple syrup, police say.

James Robert McGirr,┬аfrom the rural municipality of Springfield┬атАФ just east of Winnipeg┬атАФ┬аfaces charges linked to his alleged role in several┬а“high-level drug trafficking rings,” said┬аRCMP┬аintelligence officer Insp. Joe Telus.

The charges follow a pair of related┬аRCMP investigations, beginning with┬аone dubbed Project Divergent, which launched in 2018 and┬аled to the arrest of at least 20 people┬аin early 2022.

“The inroads made in that project opened up avenues into other drug networks, kick-starting Project Decrypt,”┬аTelus said during a news conference in Winnipeg on Tuesday.

That second investigation led police to believe McGirr was “growing and selling vast amounts of illicit cannabis … through a criminal network, and then he was converting that ill-gotten cash into cryptocurrency to fund his lifestyle and other criminal enterprise,” said Telus.

Project Decrypt, started in April 2021,┬аfocused on the illegal trafficking of large amounts of cannabis.

It led investigators to McGirr, whom they accuse of obtaining a Health Canada licence for a micro-grow operation through fraudulent means so he could grow “vast amounts” of cannabis.┬а

RCMP also allege he got his hands on legitimate personal Health Canada medical licences under the names of associates as a front for then supplying cannabis he was growing┬аto criminal networks.

McGirr was also laundering profits by converting cash into cryptocurrency┬аand helping others do the same, RCMP said.

RCMP supplied a photo of this bitcoin ATM machine, used to convert cash to cryptocurrency. (Submitted by RCMP)

An RCMP spokesperson said there has been a rise in fraud and Canada Revenue Agency scams in Manitoba associated with cryptocurrency.

$6M in drugs, proceeds seized

In June and August of this year, police searched 11 properties тАФ┬аeight┬аin Winnipeg, along with properties in the southern Manitoba communities of Sunnyside and Navin┬аand the RM of Springfield┬атАФ where they found $6 million worth of drugs and┬аproceeds of crime, Telus said.┬а

RCMP said an estimated┬а$2 million worth of cannabis was recovered┬аand $3 million in property┬аwas seized, as well as┬аseven guns, $15,000 in cash, and $203,000 worth of clothing, jewelery and other lifestyle items.

Another $700,000 worth of drug and cryptocurrency equipment was┬аseized, including a bitcoin ATM machine, RCMP said.

A series of firearms are laid out on a table as part of a police bust news conference.
Guns, a bulletproof vest and items seized as part of a Manitoba RCMP investigation called Project Decrypt are laid out on a table during a news conference in Winnipeg on Tuesday. (Alana Cole/CBC)

Seven people, including McGirr, were arrested from June to┬аSeptember.

McGirr faces five charges under the Criminal Code┬атАФ┬аfraud over $5,000, identity fraud, possession of property obtained by crime, laundering proceeds of crime and false pretences┬атАФ┬аand five under the Cannabis Act.

Five of the six others arrested┬аare charged under the Criminal Code or Cannabis Act.

All were released on a promise to appear in court.┬аNone of the charges have been proven in court.

Charges against a sixth associate, whose property contained a grow op,┬аwere stayed after he died.

The Decrypt and Divergent investigations show “criminal networks feed off each other and are interconnected,” Insp.┬аTelus said.

A police officer speaks into a microphone at a podium during a news conference.
RCMP┬аintelligence officer Insp. Joe Telus talks about Project Decrypt at a news conference at Manitoba RCMP headquarters in Winnipeg on Tuesday. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Health Canada security concerns

McGirr’s business, Elevated Prairies, was initially registered under a different name in 2018 with him listed as┬аdirector, according to court documents filed in Manitoba Court of King’s Bench in June of this year.

In March 2019, that company applied to Health Canada for a commercial cannabis licence with McGirr to be listed as “master grower,” among other titles.

By January 2021, Health Canada refused to provide a security clearance to him┬а“on the basis that he has current family members with links to organized crime, specifically drug trafficking activities,” according to the court documents.

Louis Vuitton bags and a Rolex are parts of evidence shown during a police news conference.
Louis Vuitton bags and a Rolex watch were among items seized by Winnipeg police. (Alana Cole/CBC)

Elevated Prairies responded by removing McGirr’s name from the application in summer 2021 and appointing a family member in his place as the one who would oversee the business. That filing also suggested McGirr’s role would be reduced to “general consultant” advising on development of the legal operation, growing techniques and marketing, the documents say.

Elevated Prairies reapplied for a licence in May 2022, with another person named as director тАФ the same man who┬аhad charges against him stayed when he died sometime following the RCMP raid this summer.

Health Canada approved that application in February 2023 for the operation of a micro-cultivation cannabis operation.

But court documents say McGirr retained a “high level of control over decisions made by the company.”

A Mercedes sedan is seen on a trailer.
A Mercedes sedan was seized as part of Project Decrypt, RCMP say. (Submitted by RCMP)

An undercover officer purchased multi-kilogram quantities of cannabis from members of the business throughout the course of the investigation, RCMP said.

In one exchange, McGirr told the officer he grew up to 150 pounds (nearly 70 kilograms)┬аa month and stated he┬аsmuggled┬а“[cannabis] concentrate into and out of the country via barrels of honey or maple syrup,” the court documents state.

Police seized around 1,400 cannabis plants during seizures from two properties during June raids, the court documents say.

Health Canada is reviewing details of the investigation.

A spokesperson said commercial cannabis licence applicants are subject to an “in-depth security clearance process” similar to screening processes associated with other “areas of sensitivity or national importance.”

Regulations also require any other staff or business partner associated with the primary licence holder to also clear a security check, the spokesperson said in a statement.

RCMP seize $6M in connection with drug trafficking and money laundering schemes

RCMP have uncovered a high level drug trafficking ring where money was being laundered through cryptocurrency. Police searched 10 properties in the RM of Springfield, Sunnyside, Navin and Winnipeg. They seized drugs, property, firearms and cryptocurrency with a total value of $6 million.

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