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MORNINGS IN THE LAB
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Cocaine in your mail? Project Puma hit Portage hard.

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That cocaine bust? It went right through our mail.

Morning from the Central Plains — here's what's moving through Portage today.

You know, we see a lot of traffic on the Trans-Canada here in Portage, both on the road and on the rails. But when you hear about traffickers moving serious weight — hundreds of kilograms of cocaine — and routing it through the postal service, using a local retail outlet as a front? That hits different. Court documents from the sentencing hearings on Project Puma are detailing how this operation was moving product, and it's a stark reminder that even in a place like Portage, smack dab between Winnipeg and Brandon, the bigger world's issues find their way here.

### The Flow of Things

This isn't just about some backroad deal; it’s about a sophisticated network that leveraged everyday systems.

* **Mail as a Mule:** The fact they were using Canada Post to ship significant amounts of cocaine is what really grabs you. It shows a level of planning that goes beyond typical street-level distribution.

* **Retail Cover:** Setting up a legitimate-looking business to mask the illicit trade is another layer that makes this feel too close to home. It makes you wonder who's really behind the counter sometimes.

* **Interprovincial Reach:** This wasn't just Manitoba-centric. Project Puma was an interprovincial investigation, meaning the drugs were coming from and going to places well beyond our provincial lines.

It’s easy to think of Portage as a place where you stop for gas, maybe grab a bite before hitting the road again. But we're a hub, a vital artery for goods and people moving across the country. And unfortunately, that also means we're on the map for those looking to move things they shouldn't. This kind of operation, running through our mail system, right under our noses, just underscores that we're more than just a pit stop on the TCH. We’re a real city with real connections, and sometimes that brings real problems.

Darren Flett, MiTL Sports Desk.

You can hear more on this kind of stuff when Keith and the crew get going — tune in at mornings.live.

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More from Darren Flett

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →