![]() |
Toronto, Canada Delta Kappa Epsilon Drug Raid Reported
The June 28, 2008 Globe and Mail story is on its web site:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servl....wfratraid0628 Brief excerpts: Toronto police officers seized more than $126,000 in illegal drugs and charged two men with trafficking during a raid on a fraternity house near the University of Toronto late Friday. Uniform and plainclothes officers had to force their way into the Delta Kappa Epsilon . . . house when the occupants refused to answer the door, police said. Some tried to escape out a back door but were nabbed by officers waiting outside. Police seized more than $126,000-worth of Ketamine and cocaine as well as . . . psilocybin . . . . The Toronto Sun has a similar but not identical story: http://www.torontosun.com/News/Toron...8/6015586.html |
Well... they were having fun on their way out. Shrooms and cat tranquilizers are relatively cheap, so that was f***-ton of blow they had.
A kilo is probably somewhere between $20-30k. 4 or 5 kilos of coke at a fraternity house, damn. |
Quote:
I don't know, never messed with the stuff. |
I could say something about a certain famous DKE with a former drug problem who is now POTUS, however.. instead I'll ask the question... Do we know if these guys are even DKEs? It says one was a 29 y/o alumni and it just says the other is a current U of T president. I know that a lot of chapters rent out space during the summer term and sometimes don't have any members living in the house.
|
This isn't the first time DKE at U of T has had issues.
|
Quote:
|
Impressive, to be true.
|
First off it isn't a current DKE president, they're just mentioning the alums of DKE.
"Uniform and plainclothes officers had to force their way into the Delta Kappa Epsilon . . . house when the occupants refused to answer the door, police said. Some tried to escape out a back door but were nabbed by officers waiting outside." That is definitely an exaggeration of what happened. |
Question: Some newspapers are including DKE's chapter designation in their reports. In the Toronto Star, for example, they're calling it Delta Kappa Epsilon Alpha Phi, not Delta Kappa Epsilon, Alpha Phi chapter.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
First of all let me clarify a couple of things: The raid was a cocaine trafficking raid with an unknown amount of cocaine being found(supposedly 125,000 worth, which I think is ridiculous because no one knew about the cocaine and if no one knew about the cocaine why would anyone carry enough to make 100 grand with no one interested in buying it). The amounts of Ketamine and Mushrooms were minuscule and only for personal use. One explanation is that the under cover police baited one of the arrested individuals into producing as much cocaine as he could for a transaction and then the raid went down. Then all of the sudden this large amount of cocaine became a piece of stationary in the house and the individual responsible for the transaction became the owner of that massive amount of coke. The article has an inaccuracy. The police did not knock, they charged the front door, even though they need to knock and ask for access showing the search warrant. I guess they must have assumed that armed fraternity gunmen were holding millions of dollars worth of cocaine were going to barricade themselves and take hostages....not. There were witnesses standing directly outside of the main entrance when the raid happened and their testimony directly contradicts the media reports of a lawful entrance. but...they had plain clothes officers inside the building at the time of the raid and knew by name exactly who they wanted to arrest. But then again there was no arrest warrant, only a search warrant for the main floor of the building. The raid was also performed illegally on the residences of the second and third floor of the building. Some of the victims were in their rooms when police stormed their rooms told them to get on the floor and handcuffed them. Everyone in the building was gathered in a room on the main floor under a thing called investigative detention, where everyone was I.D.ed and asked questions for about an hour. A witness described the experience as shocking, "having police barge into your room and being told to lay on the floor while being handcuffed is not my idea of an ideal Friday night." Many of the residents, who are students are shocked and in disbelief that there was any cocaine dealing in the house. Which I personally find agreeable since I frequent the house quite often and share a couple of beers with my DKE friend. I'm not a fan of hippie stuff like police brutality and media lies but the shit that went down in the DKE house and the media reports thereafter are a bunch of bullshit meant to justify the raid and portray Delta Kappa Epsilon and the fellow fraternities and sororities as the stereotypical uneducated drunkards. Hope this stuff doesn't bring you guys down, you rock!
|
Another news story,
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Crime/20...19256-sun.html includes quotes from a resident of the house. Excerpt: "Everybody was hanging out at the house -- we get together to watch TV and party a little bit -- and there was a big bang at the door," Andrew Weiner, a resident of the house, said. "One of the guys goes out, looks down the hallway and comes back and says 'there's a man pointing a gun to our house,' " he said. "Next thing we know there's plainclothes guys everywhere, people are on the floor." Those who ran out the back door were arrested . . . . "They went through the entire house and took a bunch of us down (for questioning at the police station)," said Weiner, who was released without charges. |
Quote:
You must have made off with some quality stuff from there. |
Quote:
Now they're busted, down on St. George Street, set up like a bowling pin. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:27 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.