Crime
Sylvan Lake woman charged with stealing over $500,000.00 from employer

From Rimbey RCMP
Rimbey RCMP investigate fraud over $500,000
Following a lengthy investigation that was started in July 2019, the Rimbey RCMP have laid charges against a Sylvan Lake resident alleged to have committed fraudulent transactions totalling in excess of $500,000.
On July 24 the Rimbey RCMP were made aware that a local business believed that one of their employees was taking cash from the business account.Ā An investigation was launched immediately.
On August 30, 2019 the suspect turned herself in and was arrested by the RCMP. The investigation determined that fraudulent activity started as early as February 2017.Ā Ā Ā The investigation is complex and RCMP members continue to work on obtaining different pieces of information from various financial institutions.
Laurie May Watts (55) has been charged with theft over $5,000, use of credit card data, forge a document and uttering a forged document.Ā She appeared in Rimbey Provincial Court on Dec. 6 and is scheduled for her next court appearance on March 6, 2020.
Crime
U.S. Lawmakers Confront Chinese Government Conspiracy Behind Marijuana Boom

Officials testified that Chinese state-backed grow networks have created a $153 billion black market in Oklahoma alone, with suspicious activity reported near the nationās largest munitions plant.
In chilling testimony to Congress, law enforcement officials warned that Chinese organized crime groups, operating with Beijingās support, have transformed Americaās marijuana boom into a $153 billion black-market industry in Oklahoma alone ā an enterprise marked by execution-style killings and grow sites planted near sensitive U.S. military infrastructure.
Suggesting that thisĀ Chinese crime waveĀ ā largely unrecognized by the American public ā is part of a trillion-dollar enterprise embedded in multiple states, legislators heard that the epicenters include Oklahoma, Maine, California, and Michigan. Thousands of Chinese-run farms have proliferated under lax state laws, with workers smuggled across the Mexican border and forced into slave-like conditions. Properties are acquired through real estate and legal fraud, while the operations feed a nationwide criminal network tied to the Chinese Communist Party, fentanyl trafficking, weapons smuggling, prostitution, and global money laundering.
The Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Accountability hearing ā entitledĀ āInvasion of the Homeland: How China is Using Illegal Marijuana to Build a Criminal Network Across AmericaāĀ ā heard first from Donnie Anderson, Director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.
Anderson testified that Oklahomaās loose medical marijuana framework inadvertently opened the door to transnational syndicates, fueling what he described as a $153 billion black-market industry. After more than three decades in public safety, he said, āthe impact of black-market marijuana in Oklahoma is unlike anything I have encountered in my career. What is even more alarming is the growing influence and involvement of the Chinese Communist Party in this illicit industry.ā
Anderson explained that Chinese nationals dominate the operations, concealing control through straw buyers, fraudulent licenses, and shell companies, often backed by attorneys, real estate agents, and consultants. He warned that the CCP also maintains control by leveraging encrypted apps. āBecause WeChat is based in mainland China and encrypted, U.S. law enforcement cannot serve legal process or conduct electronic surveillance as we would with domestic platforms,ā he said, āmaking them a major obstacle in our investigations.ā
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The human toll has been severe. In 2022, four Chinese nationals were executed and a fifth critically wounded at an illegal grow near Hennessey, Oklahoma. In July 2025, a Canadian national was murdered execution-style at a grow near Lake Thunderbird, in what investigators believe was a targeted robbery.
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Anderson testified there is āno doubtā the Chinese government has shown interest in Oklahomaās marijuana industry, citing documented financial transfers to the Bank of China and connections to Chinese state-owned businesses. He further warned that the CCP is leveraging its global influence apparatus to maintain control of these sites. āIt is my belief that the CCP maintains access to the criminal marijuana site operations, particularly through its known practice of controlling expatriates via so-called āpolice stations,āā he told lawmakers.
He also highlighted national security risks from the physical location of these grows. In one ongoing investigation, the Department of Defense flagged suspicious activity at a marijuana grow run by an ethnic Chinese group next to the McAlester ammunition plant ā the nationās largest munitions facility, home to nearly one-third of the Pentagonās stockpile and responsible for producing the MOAB bomb.
āAlarmingly, many of these grows are located near critical infrastructure, including military bases and pipelines,ā Anderson added, warning that the proximity of foreign-run criminal operations to sensitive U.S. defense assets raised extraordinary risks.
Pressed by a Georgia legislator on why Americans remain unaware of this foreign crime wave, Anderson stressed the scale and sophistication of the operations. āWhen I say sophisticated, I mean at a level that law enforcement across the nation has never seen before ā that complex, that layered. They hide themselves under many layers of LLCs and ownership structures,ā he said.
As an example, Anderson described how Oklahoma registries might show a āJohn Smithā listed as the 75 percent owner of a marijuana business. āBut when you dig in, you find John has never put up the $3,500 required to put his name on that license. The money comes from elsewhere, because Chinese nationals cannot directly do that in the state of Oklahoma. Meanwhile, the real organizers are often people in places like Flushing, New York, or California. They control operations across the United States but may never step foot in Oklahoma, except to occasionally visit.ā
He added: āAnd this isnāt just an Oklahoma problem ā itās global. Chinese nationals are doing similar things in Latin America and the Caribbean, where they are building infrastructure, even roads, as part of larger investments. Thereās always a reason behind it, and it connects back here to the United States. At its core, this is about national security, not just Oklahoma. And youāre right ā most Americans have no idea this is happening.ā
The panelās second witness, legal scholar Paul Larkin, argued that Chinese organized crime groups cannot be separated from the state whose nationals dominate them. āThe Chinese organized crime elements are working with the tacit agreement of the PRC and CCP,ā he testified, stressing that U.S. conspiracy law provides the tools to prosecute these networks as such. He pointed to the long-established legal principle of willful blindness: juries are entitled to infer intent from patterns of conduct, even without express agreements.
One legislator asked: āEarlier this week, we discussed how foreign adversaries see U.S. agriculture not only as an economic target but also as a homeland security vulnerability. Mr. Larkin, how significant is land acquisition to the broader strategy of Chinese criminal groups operating in America?ā
āFirst, it gives them property to grow and process illicit drugs, which can then serve as distribution hubs,ā Larkin said. āBut beyond that, certain sites ā especially indoor grows ā could also be leveraged for espionage. They could be positioned to monitor nearby American communities, military bases, or other sensitive facilities. That makes land acquisition not just a criminal concern, but a serious national security threat.ā
If Larkin pressed the legal case for direct CCP accountability, the next witness, retired DEA executive Chris Urben, supplied the operational picture. He stressed that federal task forces must deploy the RICO Act ā once used against the Italian mafia ā to give under-resourced state agencies the support to combat what he called the new dominant crime element from China.
Drawing on his 24-year career, Urben testified that Chinese money laundering networks have quietly transformed the economics of the global drug trade, emerging around 2016 as the predominant launderers for criminal groups worldwide. Chinaās value to the Mexican cartels, he explained, goes beyond supplying synthetic opioid precursors; its laundering services have supercharged cartel profits, boosting proceeds by as much as five percent.
Asked by a legislator how China had seized global dominance in money laundering, Urben was blunt: the advantage is WeChat. Controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, the encrypted platform cannot be tapped by U.S. law enforcement.
āNo other global crime network has a state-protected, trusted communications system like that,ā Urben said. āWeChat needs to be disrupted. It cannot continue to function as a secure platform for criminal money laundering. There must be a state-level, legislated solution with the Chinese government ā one that ends WeChatās role in these networks.ā
He warned that dismissing marijuana grows as ājust weed casesā is a dangerous mistake. āThey are harmful in and of themselves, and they also help fuel Chinese money laundering networks and other Chinese transnational crime-linked activity such as human trafficking, fentanyl distribution, and other dangerous and harmful activities.ā Such cases, he urged, must be treated as RICO-prosecutable money-laundering conspiracies tied directly into the global fentanyl and trafficking economy.
At the outset of the hearing, Chairman Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma framed the issue in broader terms. āWe are here today to talk about an important issue, significant national security implications,ā he said, making clear that the problem was not confined to his home state but stretched āto Maine, California, and all across our homeland.ā
Brecheen laid out the scale of what lawmakers were confronting: thousands of Chinese-run marijuana grow operations, not isolated in backwoods counties but dispersed nationwide ā embedded in tribal lands, national parks, and suburban communities. He stressed that these are not simple drug cases. āMany Chinese illegal operations serve as fronts for a wider criminal enterprise, including human and drug trafficking, prostitution, weapons smuggling, and money laundering,ā he said. These networks, often with direct or indirect ties to the CCP, have built a sophisticated underground criminal infrastructure in the United States.
The national security implications, he warned, were profound. āWeāve enabled these foreign organizations with potential links to the CCP to build up a sophisticated network throughout the United States, which facilitates a wide range of other criminal activity and presents a national security threat.ā
Some of the foreign nationals running these sites, Brecheen added, are more heavily armed than the sheriffs and deputies who might stumble onto them.
After sketching the scope of the threat, Brecheen turned to āpaint the pictureā of how the operations unfold on the ground. He described how groups of Chinese nationals, affiliated with transnational criminal organizations, cross the southern border and fan into rural states like Oklahoma. With them are vulnerable workers, lured under the false promise of legal employment. Once in place, the crime groups recruit a local resident, offering several hundred thousand dollars to use their name and identity to purchase farmland. It is a proposition the resident ācannot refuse.ā
The arrangement moves quickly. Within days, a seemingly ordinary property is converted into a sprawling grow site. Workers are forced into 14-hour shifts, confined to cramped quarters with little water or ventilation. Toxic pesticides ā banned in the United States ā are burned on-site, creating fumes that poison both the laborers and the surrounding environment. Armed guards oversee the operation, ensuring obedience. The marijuana produced is high-potency and contaminated, yet within weeks it is trafficked across the country, from Oklahoma to New York, feeding an illicit market worth many billions.
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Crime
Struggle for control of the Sinaloa Carel has ramifications for Canada

Washington Moves Against El Mayoās Cartel Network, Accusing It of Bribery, Political Capture, and Cross-Border Fentanyl Trade
The U.S. Treasuryās Office of Foreign Assets Control has announced sweeping sanctions on the Los Mayos faction of the Sinaloa Cartel, a move that highlights the groupās violent war with El Chapo GuzmĆ”nās heirs for control of a multibillion-dollar fentanyl empire entrenched in more than 40 nations including Canada.Ā The sanctions also pointed to deep corruption of political and security offices on Mexicoās northwest border.
āThe Sinaloa Cartel is a foreign terrorist organization that continues to traffic narcotics, launder its proceeds, and corrupt local officials,ā said John K. Hurley, Treasuryās under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence. āTodayās actions cut at the heart of the political and commercial infrastructure that Los Mayos relies upon to poison Americans with fentanyl and maintain control of territory in Baja California.ā
Once a monolithic enterprise spanning cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, and now fentanyl routes across the Americas, the Sinaloa Cartel has fractured since the imprisonment of co-founders JoaquĆn āEl Chapoā GuzmĆ”n and Ismael āEl Mayoā Zambada GarcĆa. Their successors ā GuzmĆ”nās sons, collectively called Los Chapitos, and the Zambada loyalists known as Los Mayos ā have plunged northwest Mexico into open war.
A sign of the Mayo factionās foreign reach emerged inĀ British Columbia months ago,Ā when court filings revealed that a fortified compound in Surrey, south of Vancouver, housed a trafficking syndicate tied directly to El Mayoās network. According to the governmentās civil-forfeiture suit, the group negotiated cocaine shipments with Zambadaās emissaries and stockpiled a cache of weapons, opioids, and counterfeit pharmaceuticals. When the RCMP raided the mansion, they found Hikvision surveillance systems, encrypted phones, and nearly a kilogram of Ecstasy alongside fentanyl pills and counterfeit Xanax. The property ā minutes from the Peace Arch border crossing ā is now the subject of a multimillion-dollar forfeiture case.
After years of tense coexistence, hostilities between the Chapo and Mayo factions erupted last year, and the human toll has been staggering. Reuters and the Associated Press reported that homicides in Sinaloa surged to 883 in the first half of 2025, up from 224 a year earlier. Entire towns have been emptied and convoys of gunmen have left highways strewn with burned-out vehicles.
OFAC, in its designation notice, confirmed: āTurf wars between Los Mayos and Los Chapitos have resulted in the deaths of over a thousand people in the Mexican state of Sinaloa.ā
At the center of todayās sanctions is Juan JosĆ© Ponce FĆ©lix, better known as El Ruso. OFAC identified him as āthe founder and leader of the primary armed wing of Los Mayos,ā controlling routes in Baja California and extending the factionās fentanyl operations north. A 2015 indictment from the Southern District of California described El Ruso as the commander of āa fleet of soldiersā responsible for kidnappings, hostage-taking, torture, and murder in furtherance of Sinaloa Cartel interests. Now, OFAC says, his dominance in Baja has become a key pillar of Los Mayosā trafficking empire. Earlier this week, the State Department offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest.
The designations go beyond gunmen. OFAC spotlighted Rosarito, a coastal town just 15 miles south of San Diego, as a laboratory of cartel political capture. Los Mayos, it said, operated through the Arzate brothers ā Alfonso and RenĆ© ā and their financial lieutenant, JesĆŗs GonzĆ”lez LomelĆ, who owned bars, restaurants, and resorts across Mexico, used to launder millions in cartel proceeds.
These commercial fronts were paired with direct political influence. Candelario Arcega Aguirre, a cartel operative with close ties to Rosaritoās then-mayor, Hilda Araceli Brown Figueredo, leveraged his relationship to place allies in the municipal Department of Public Security. According to OFAC, Arcega, GonzĆ”lez, and Brown ācollected extortion payments for the Arzates, assisted in managing the Arzate brothersā operations, and ensured protection for the Arzatesā criminal activities by the Department of Public Security in Rosarito.ā
The network extended to a transportation company, Transporte Urbano y Suburbano del V Municipio S.A. de C.V., which OFAC identified as a laundering vehicle for Arcega. All told, the sanctions designated not just traffickers but a matrix of businessmen and public officials accused of entwining Rosaritoās government with cartel command.
U.S. officials describe the cartel as a global enterprise, with distribution and laundering nodes in more than 40 countries and thousands of operatives and facilitators. Canada has been deeply saturated in that network, a surge that accelerated after former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau eased immigration requirements for Mexican citizens.
Court filings in the British Columbia case alleged that the Surrey-based network had the clout to negotiate supply terms directly with El Mayo until his arrest by U.S. law enforcement in July 2024. That capture ādisrupted the DTOās efforts to import and distribute cocaine in Canada,ā the documents said, forcing the group to seek new contacts in Mexico. The cache discovered at the mansion included 400 grams of counterfeit Xanax, 810 oxycodone pills, 5.5 grams of fentanyl, and sophisticated video surveillance equipment designed to fortify the property against raids.
The Canadian government formally listed the Sinaloa Cartel as a terrorist entity in February 2025, following the State Departmentās U.S. designation. By June, OFAC had moved to sanction the Chapitos wing of the cartel. With todayās action, both sides of the cartelās civil war are now under U.S. financial blockade.
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