B.C. drug-boat captain John Stirling pleads guilty in Oregon

Credit to Author: Kim Bolan| Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2020 00:46:02 +0000

April 12, 2019: Less than a year after B.C. skipper John Stirling was released from a U.S. prison where he served seven years for cocaine smuggling, the controversial sea captain is back behind bars. Stirling, 65, was arrested off the Oregon coast April 9, 2019, on a sailing vessel allegedly carrying 28 seven-gallon jugs containing liquid meth. Photo: Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office PNG

Notorious B.C. drug-boat captain John (Philip) Stirling has pleaded guilty in a U.S. courtroom to smuggling methamphetamine on the high seas.

Stirling, 65, was arrested off the Oregon coast in April on a sailboat called the Mandalay, which wasn’t registered in either Canada or the U.S. He tried to get the charges against him thrown out, claiming the U.S. had no jurisdiction to prosecute him as a Canadian in international waters, but he lost that bid in a Portland courtroom last week.

So, on Monday, Stirling pleaded guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute meth, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. But Stirling’s plea deal recommends he be sentenced to 87 months.

“I have carefully reviewed every part of this agreement with my attorney. I understand and voluntarily agree to its terms. I expressly waive my rights to appeal as outlined in this agreement. I wish to plead guilty because, in fact, I am guilty,” the document signed by Stirling said.

When the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Alert detected Stirling’s vessel on April 9 they tried to communicate with him in several ways. But he went below deck and ingested fentanyl before the coast guard members boarded the vessel.

“Stirling’s speech began to deteriorate and he displayed signs of a possible drug overdose. Coast guard personnel administered medical aid to Stirling and evacuated him by helicopter to Astoria, Ore.,” the U.S. Department of Justice said in a news release. “He was later transported by ambulance to Adventist Health Portland for additional treatment.”

The U.S. officers found 28, seven-gallon jugs containing liquid meth aboard the Mandalay, which Stirling has agreed to forfeit as part of the plea deal.

John “Phil” Stirling in a 2000 file photo RIC ERNST / PNG

Stirling made incriminating statements both to police and hospital staff after his overdose. He told investigators “that the drugs were loaded in a boat-to-boat transfer in the Sea of Cortez, from an unspecified cartel, and that he was taking them to a large, also unspecified, criminal organization in Canada.”

He claimed to be doing the transport for someone else for $20,000. The boat was owned by a company in Victoria called Tropical Time Shares, which has no phone number or website. It was registered in September 2018.

S/V Mandalay in an undated photo from the previous owner.

Stirling’s drug-trade history dates to 1990, when he pleaded guilty to cocaine-conspiracy charges and was sentenced to five years.

In 2001, he was arrested on his boat, the Western Wind, in the Strait of Juan de Fuca with 2.5 tonnes of cocaine aboard. American authorities turned him over to the RCMP but he was never charged.

MV Bakur sits at dock in 2006 at DND property in View Royal where Mounties (whose faces have been blurred to protect their identity) are aboard searching for evidence after the boat was seized in Ucluelet. Five men were charged in the major drug bust, including John Stirling who made headlines in February 2001 when he was the skipper and owner of the Western Wind that was seized with 2.5 tons of cocaine on-board. Photo: Debra Brash/Victoria Times Colonist Debra Brash / Times Colonist

Then, in May 2006, he was arrested again off Vancouver Island after police found $6.5-million worth of marijuana on-board a 47-metre fishing vessel registered to him. He and several others were charged, but the charges were later dropped.

In 2011, the Americans arrested him off the coast of Colombia with 381 kilograms of cocaine bound for Australia. He was convicted and sentenced to seven years. He had been out of jail for less than a year when he was arrested again in the latest case.

Stirling’s sentencing is set for April 20.

kbolan@postmedia.com

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