Pearson Airport in Mississauga

A Brampton real estate agent has been sentenced to seven years and will face deportation after bringing some 13 kilograms of opium through security at Pearson International Airport in Mississauga.

Nitish Verma was found guilty of one count of importing opium by a jury on March 6 following his arrest back in August 2019 at Pearson Airport following a return trip from India.

A secondary inspection of the now-34-year-old’s luggage revealed more than 13 kg of opium worth up to $936,460 in boxes concealed as Indian sweets and in plastic bags according to a ruling by Justice Lucille Shaw.

Verma has been sentenced to seven years and, as he is a permanent resident and not a Canadian citizen, will face deportation once his sentence is over.

The court heard testimony from Verma, who claimed that while in India he was contacted by a friend in Canada and asked “if he could do the friend a favour by bringing some sweets and gifts back to Canada from his relatives,” the decision reads.

Verma said he was given sweets boxes which he packed in his luggage but denied knowing that there was opium packed inside – a claim the jury rejected “beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Many family members and friends testified on Verma’s behalf, with the court hearing how the real estate agent for Royal LePage is “a hard worker who volunteers and contributes to the community since he moved to Canada.”

“It strikes me as tragic that someone who showed so much promise and had so much support could commit a criminal offence with devasting (sic) consequences,” Shaw said in the judgement. “Those devastating consequences are not just for the victims who seek and use drugs but also the consequence he now faces.”

The incident is Verma’s first offence, and Shaw said Verma’s wife is also a victim in the case as she planned to move to Canada and start a family with him.

“That plan is forever altered as the immigration consequences of his actions will result in his deportation once his sentence is served