Heavy sentences for cocaine dealers

June 19, 2018

Owen Glaze and Andrew Brown, the men who were recently found guilty after having been on trial in relation to 66 kilograms of cocaine valued at $264 million, were yesterday sentenced when they appeared in the St James Parish Court.

Glaze, who was represented by attorney Dionne Maylor, was sentenced to a mandatory term of three years' imprisonment.

Brown, who was represented by lawyers Churchill Neita and Delano Harrison, was sentenced to three years and nine months in prison.

The men were each instructed to pay a fine of $500,000 or spend three months in prison for possession of cocaine. They were admonished and discharged on the charges of dealing in cocaine and trafficking cocaine.

The two men were sentenced by presiding parish judge Natalie Hart-Hines after they were found guilty of possession of, dealing in, and trafficking cocaine.

During the sentencing hearing, attorney Neita asked judge Hart-Hines to grant bail to both men, ahead of the defence lawyers' plans to appeal the sentences before the Court of Appeal.

"The men have been coming to court for five years, and they have never absconded," Neita said in his application.

"Yes, it is commendable that they did not flee. But, at this stage, I am not prepared to give bail. I think only a term of imprisonment will be appropriate in this case," Hart-Hines replied.

Glaze and Brown were arrested on April 20, 2013, by officers from the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency, the Transnational Crime and Narcotics Division, and the Jamaica Defence Force, who were conducting an operation along the Montpelier main road in St James. They were travelling in a Guardsman armoured vehicle.

During the police operation, the defendants' vehicle was stopped and searched and the cocaine was found inside. The men were subsequently arrested and charged.

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