Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Mike Hager
Publication Date: February 13, 2025 - 21:06
Owner of meth and fentanyl super lab property denies involvement with drug operation
February 13, 2025
The owner of a rural Okanagan property the RCMP alleges once held Canada’s largest and most sophisticated methamphetamine and fentanyl lab is fighting the B.C. government’s attempt to seize his land, stating he had no idea what his tenant was doing there.In a response filed in British Columbia Supreme Court this week, Michael Driehuyzen denies almost everything in the Civil Forfeiture Office’s Jan. 31 notice of civil claim.He agrees that he bought the property in Falkland, B.C., in 2007 and has a mortgage on it. But Mr. Driehuyzen, an electrician in the Vancouver suburb of Abbotsford, states he purchased the property with his savings and is asking the Civil Forfeiture Office to drop the pursuit of his land because he had no idea about any of the alleged criminal activity.
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On Nov. 18, 2020, Jeremy Johnson crashed his Dodge Ram pickup truck on the outskirts of Fort Frances, a border town of 7,500 in Northwestern Ontario.When police searched the accident scene, they found a jacket under the truck with a tote bag in the sleeve, wrapped around a plastic baggie. Inside was a brick of fentanyl weighing 448 grams – just five shy of a pound. As little as two milligrams of the drug, the equivalent of a few grains of salt, can be deadly for users with no tolerance for the drug.
March 12, 2025 - 07:30 | Colin Freeze, Marcus Gee, Willow Fiddler, Photography by David Jackson | The Globe and Mail
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