Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
International

Quebec Woman To Stand Trial For Allegedly Importing $30.5M Worth Of Cocaine Into Australia On Cruise

Darpan News Desk, 22 Dec, 2016 11:30 AM
    SYDNEY, Australia — A Canadian woman will stand trial for her involvement in allegedly importing cocaine into Australia on a cruise ship, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.
     
    The newspaper said Melina Roberge cried Wednesday as a magistrate ordered her tried on a charge of bringing a commercial quantity of cocaine into the country.
     
    Roberge, 23, was arrested in late August with two other Canadians — 64-year-old Andre Tamine and 28-year-old Isabelle Lagace —  after the MS Sea Princess docked in the Australian city.
     
    The newspaper had previously reported that Lagace entered a guilty plea on the same charge last Friday and that Tamine is to appear in the New South Wales District Court next year.
     
     
    Australian Border Force Cmdr. Tim Fitzgerald had said detection dogs helped police allegedly find 95 kilograms of cocaine, worth an estimated $30.5 million, in suitcases.
     
    Roberge's lawyer argued the Quebec woman had no knowledge of the drugs and said there was no evidence that tied her to them, the Herald reported.
     
    But Magistrate Robert Williams said it was "highly improbable" that anyone other than Roberge or Lagace would have stored drugs in the suitcases without the defendants' knowledge. 
     
    "The cabin space was tiny and the suitcases can be described as reasonably large suitcases," the Herald reported Williams as saying.
     
    Roberge's case returns to court in February, and Lagace is expected to be sentenced the same month.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Michelle Obama Team Up To Promote Education For Women, Girls

    Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Michelle Obama Team Up To Promote Education For Women, Girls
     The meeting of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Barack Obama wasn't the only mutual admiration society on display Thursday in Washington.

    Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, Michelle Obama Team Up To Promote Education For Women, Girls

    Dubai Official Warns Of 'Clash Of Civilizations' Over Donald Trump

    Trump said he wouldn't stoop to being "politically correct" by avoiding such statements.

    Dubai Official Warns Of 'Clash Of Civilizations' Over Donald Trump

    Two Canadian Hostages In The Philippines Shown In New Islamic Extremists Video

    Two Canadian Hostages In The Philippines Shown In New Islamic Extremists Video
    Robert Hall and John Ridsdel — along with a Norwegian man and a Filipino woman — were kidnapped from a resort by members of Abu Sayyaf

    Two Canadian Hostages In The Philippines Shown In New Islamic Extremists Video

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky
    he best of America's spring produce, with a little help from some Canadian whisky, will feature heavily on the menu for the state dinner Thursday night to mark Justin Trudeau's first prime ministerial visit to the U.S.

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump
    Trump, 69, maintained that the war was against radical Islam, but said, "it's very hard to define. It's very hard to separate. Because you don't know who's who."

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

    With characteristic brashness, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has staked out uncompromising positions on Asia policy that could potentially roil U.S. relations with the region if he won the White House.

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties