ER Editor: Readers of this site will recall that Vancouver, the iconic city of Canada’s west coast, has been a drug-infested hellhole for a very long time. Thousands of people have died over the Feds’ permissive drug policies; areas of the city have been lost to tent cities, and these are not migrants but end-of-the-line drug addicts.

A friend of ours says there is a large warehouse at an unnamed location in the city that is chock-full of hard drugs, given out to users, and then re-sold to others, creating another level of problem. Why haven’t taxpayers been up in arms about this as they’re paying for it? Why haven’t they been asking hard questions about how such quantities of these drugs come to be in the city in the first place? Obviously drug cartels must be hovering in the background, scooping up taxpayer money and paying off local politicians.
A little light at the end of the tunnel? We’re pretty sure by this point that it isn’t just the Royal Canadian Mounted Police dealing with this problem, but a larger military outlay that may have been going on for some time.
Geography reminder —

Some twitter reaction. People have no doubt correctly identified how this sophisticated, broad-ranging operation boils down to just one man taking the fall, but no doubt there’s so much more we don’t know —
BC RCMP announce bust of largest drug “superlab” in Canadian history.
Officers seized a 1/2 tonne of hard drugs, 89 firearms, $500,000 in cash, and an unprecedented amount of precursor chemicals. #bcpoli pic.twitter.com/EOkN8dKq0Z
— Jarryd Jäger (@JarrydJaeger) October 31, 2024
450 million dollars worth of drugs on a 66 hectare compound
100 firearms + explosives
98 million doses of fentanyl + tons of other drugs
and the RCMP arrest ONE GUY, with a total of 7 charges. WHAT? pic.twitter.com/B77yagz4Rm
— Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸 (@Tablesalt13) November 2, 2024
This is why the RCMP is a joke:
•$450 million worth of drugs on a 66-hectare compound
•100 firearms and explosives
•98 million doses of fentanyl, plus tons of other drugsAnd the RCMP arrests one guy with a total of seven charges.https://t.co/SLo36BbCxr pic.twitter.com/ifTUMlxkvl
— Sandeep Neel (@SanUvacha) November 2, 2024
Good morning everyone, 28F light snow falling as I write this sun & clouds, expected today in FSJ
Did you ever wonder why BC had the highest per capita overdose death rate in Canada ?
Besides having Escobar Eby our Chinese Premier, BC also had a Fentanyl Super Lab😲… pic.twitter.com/xDqIUK7bQG
— Rob Logan (@Northerngold01) November 2, 2024
How could anybody be shocked? BC, the land of money laundering and legal hard street drugs having a fentanyl super lab? The cartel and bike gangs are just sprinkles on the donut, seriously🙄 https://t.co/hykKTfC8o6
— TraciLynn-High Priestess 🇨🇦 (@mamabarebighair) November 1, 2024
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Largest drug lab in Canadian history busted by RCMP near Kamloops, B.C.
“The precursor chemicals, in combination with the finished fentanyl products seized at this location, could have amounted to 95 million potentially lethal doses of fentanyl, which have been prevented from entering Canadian communities and markets abroad,” David Teboul, an assistant commissioner with the federal RCMP in the Pacific region, told reporters in Surrey on Thursday.
Co-ordinated raids were conducted on the Falkland property along with several associated properties located in Surrey B.C. last week, resulting in the seizure of an estimated 390 kilograms of methamphetamine, 54 kilograms of fentanyl, 35 kilograms of cocaine and 15 kilograms of MDMA.
In addition to the narcotics, dozens of weapons were also recovered from the Surrey locations, including 89 firearms.
A .50-calibre machine gun was among the firearms seized, along with 45 handguns, 21 AR-15-style rifles and submachine guns, “many of which were loaded and ready for use,” said Teboul.
One arrest has been made in connection with the drug lab and its Surrey properties, with Gaganpreet Randhawa being “considered the main suspect” in the investigation.
He is currently in custody facing multiple drug and weapons charges and is scheduled to appear in Surrey provincial court on Nov. 14.
“As you know, Mexican cartels don’t have their headquarters in Canada, so they’re at times out of reach of Canadian law enforcement,” said Teboul, responding to a question about why more suspects have yet to be taken into custody.
“I think it’s time for our justice system to catch up to the reality of the danger of these drugs,” he said, adding that they are working with authorities in Mexico on the investigation.
According to police, the super lab is suspected to be connected to another recent seizure that led to over 30 tonnes of methamphetamine precursors recovered earlier this month in Enderby, just 40 kilometres east of Falkland.
While no charges have been laid in that seizure, police said the chemicals were likely destined for one or more super labs busted last week.
“British Columbia is in a particularly unique, if not precarious, position because of our geography,” said Teboul.
B.C.’s extensive coastline of marine ports and its shared international border with three U.S. states – Washington, Idaho and Montana, provide ample opportunities for the importation of chemicals used to create industrial quantities of illicit drugs.
During Thursday’s press conference, Teboul would not specify which organized crime groups authorities believed to be behind the super labs, whether it be Mexican cartels or domestic motorcycle gangs like the Hell’s Angels.
“This is transnational organized crime, and the allegiances within transnational organized criminals are very fluid,” said Teboul.
“This is all about making money. These are individuals that operate by way of convenience and opportunities, and they’re not necessarily associated to one particular group that wears funny patches on their backs or these kinds of things.”
However, the assistant commissioner said the criminals involved in operations of this scale are “highly motivated and highly sophisticated,” adding that they will create alliances among other groups when opportunities and money present themselves.
Investigators said that the Falkland lab alone had enough chemical precursors on site to continue producing drugs for months without having to restock its supplies.
RCMP Insp. Jillian Wellard called the Falkland lab the largest fentanyl and methamphetamine facility ever discovered by Canadian law enforcement.
“This is undoubtedly a major blow to the transnational organized crime groups involved, and a great step towards ensuring the safety of Canadians, and the international community,” said Wellard in a statement on Thursday.
CONTINUE READING HERE
Featured images source: https://vancouversun.com/news/bc-rcmp-largest-fentanyl-meth-super-lab-falkland
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Published to The Liberty Beacon from EuropeReloaded.com

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