Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Tiptoes Through Divorce Assets Of Decades-Long Cannabis Grow-Op

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2018 07:08 PM
    VANCOUVER — Mr. and Mrs. Smith "lived well."
     
     
    Their "very successful family business," illegally growing and selling marijuana for two decades, gained them properties in British Columbia, California, Mexico, and Alberta, says a British Columbia Supreme Court ruling agreeing to the couple's divorce.
     
     
    But the illegal nature of the business enterprise left the Justice Wendy Baker with little to work with when ruling on dividing their assets.
     
     
    "The evidence from the parties as to the income derived from the marijuana sales was oral, inferential, thin and often contradictory," she says in her ruling issued Sept. 14.
     
    Credibility of both parties was an issue, Baker says of the couple, who were only identified as Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
     
     
    The trial heard in one instance that Mrs. Smith recounted seeing her husband with a clear plastic bag full of U.S. dollars that she estimated contained about $60,000 to $80,000.
     
     
    Mr. Smith said there was actually $20,000 in the bag and added he took it because she had that much or more cash in a safety deposit box.
     
     
    "Other than the inconsistent statements of these witnesses, no other evidence was presented to tend to confirm either version of events," Baker says, concluding only that there was some money taken by Mr. Smith.
     
     
    "However it was clear that the family enjoyed a comfortable lifestyle on this income. They travelled in the United States and abroad. They financed 50 per cent of their daughters' university educations. They took winters off and generally lived well."
     
     
    The daughters now have professional careers where one is a teacher and one is a lawyer, the ruling says.
     
     
    Through their life together, the document says, Mr. and Mrs. Smith grew their business and even obtained medical marijuana grow licences in 2013, which Mrs. Smith testified were a cover for their illegal grow operation.
     
     
    Under the licences, they were permitted to grow marijuana but were not permitted to sell it. However they did in fact sell the marijuana they grew, the trial heard.
     
     
    Mr. Smith was the main money earner as a welder and fabricator, when he wasn't the driving force behind the grow operations, the ruling says.
     
     
    The judge set out conditions for the sale of their homes in Grand Forks, B.C., Calgary and Mexico and ordered Mr. Smith to pay his estranged wife a lump sum of $134,694 in spousal support.
     
     
    She also ordered the two to stay at least 100 metres away from the other's home.
     
     
    "Neither party shall have contact or communication with the other in any manner, except through legal counsel now or at any time in the future," Baker says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saudi Man Helps Medical Students In Canada Seek Asylum Amid Diplomatic Tensions

    Saudi Man Helps Medical Students In Canada Seek Asylum Amid Diplomatic Tensions
    A Saudi Arabian man who successfully claimed asylum in Canada is now helping students across the country do the same amid tensions between the two countries that erupted last month.

    Saudi Man Helps Medical Students In Canada Seek Asylum Amid Diplomatic Tensions

    Man Arrested After Allegedly Shooting Himself In Foot, Crashing Car In Toronto

    Man Arrested After Allegedly Shooting Himself In Foot, Crashing Car In Toronto
    Toronto police say a man is in custody after allegedly shooting himself in the foot and then crashing his car when he tried to flee the scene.

    Man Arrested After Allegedly Shooting Himself In Foot, Crashing Car In Toronto

    Man Shot Dead While Attending Homicide Victim's Memorial, Investigators Say

    Man Shot Dead While Attending Homicide Victim's Memorial, Investigators Say
    A man was attending a memorial service for a homicide victim when he was shot dead in a waterfront park in downtown Toronto, investigators said Monday as they called on witnesses to come forward.

    Man Shot Dead While Attending Homicide Victim's Memorial, Investigators Say

    Make Robots Pay Taxes? Documents Detail Ideas To Adapt To Changing Labour Force

    Make Robots Pay Taxes? Documents Detail Ideas To Adapt To Changing Labour Force
    The Liberals have been told to consider taxing robots that displace workers, letting people pay their tax bill in kind rather than with cash, and work to prevent income inequality before it happens.

    Make Robots Pay Taxes? Documents Detail Ideas To Adapt To Changing Labour Force

    Missing 7-year-old Saskatchewan Boy's Body Found On Beach, Uncle Says

    Missing 7-year-old Saskatchewan Boy's Body Found On Beach, Uncle Says
    FORT QU'APPELLE, Sask. — Family of a missing seven-year-old boy in Saskatchewan have confirmed the child's body has been found, just over a week after his mother was discovered dead from what relatives have said they believe was a swimming accident.

    Missing 7-year-old Saskatchewan Boy's Body Found On Beach, Uncle Says

    Trial For British Sailors Accused Of Sexual Assault Begins Tuesday In Halifax

    Trial For British Sailors Accused Of Sexual Assault Begins Tuesday In Halifax
    HALIFAX — The trial of two British sailors accused of sexually assaulting a woman at a Nova Scotia military base begins Tuesday.

    Trial For British Sailors Accused Of Sexual Assault Begins Tuesday In Halifax