From the BBC:
“Canada's Supreme Court
upholds C$9m fine on maple syrup thief”
Canada's top court has imposed a
C$9.1m ($7.3m; £5.5m) fine on a man behind one of the country's stickiest
crimes - the theft of 3,000 tonnes of maple syrup. The so-called Great Canadian
Maple Syrup Heist saw the loss of nearly C$18m worth of syrup from the
country's reserves by a group of thieves. The court ordered Richard Vallières,
a "major player" in the scheme, to pay a penalty or face six years in
prison. Vallières was found guilty in 2016 of fraud, trafficking and theft. He
is currently serving an eight year prison sentence. At trial, Vallières said he
sold the syrup for C$10m and made a personal profit of around C$1m.
In a unanimous decision on
Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled that Vallières should pay a penalty equal to
the value of the stolen goods within a decade. The ruling overturns a decision
by the Quebec Court of Appeal to reduce his fine to just C$1m - equivalent to
what Vallières says he pocketed. The Quebec Maple Syrup Producers - the
so-called Opec of maple syrup - holds an emergency reserve of the product to
help meet global supply in years of poor harvests. The Canadian province
produces almost three-quarters of the world's maple syrup. Between 2011 and
2012, Vallières and the group of thieves targeted a central Quebec warehouse where
the product is stockpiled, often replacing the syrup in the barrels with water.
The thieves went on to distribute the stolen syrup throughout Canada and the
US. The theft was discovered in 2012 during a routine survey when an inspector
climbed on a stack of maple syrup barrels - which typically weigh some 270kg
(595 lbs)- and one nearly tipped over. It was empty.
^ This is pretty funny. I know it
is a major crime, but it still makes me laugh when I think of it being about
Maple Syrup. ^
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