This is part one of a three-part series. The full W5 Avery Haines Investigates documentary The Cocaine Suitcases premieres Saturday at 7 p.m. ET on CTV, Crave and our CTV News YouTube channel.
HONG KONG — A W5 investigation has uncovered an international criminal network recruiting Canadians, including teenagers, to transport large quantities of cocaine to Hong Kong.
In four months, four Canadians arriving on separate flights were arrested at Hong Kong International Airport with a total of almost 100 kilograms of cocaine in their suitcases.

Jade’s case
Then-19‑year‑old Jade, of Cambridge, Ont., was detained in Hong Kong in September 2025 after customs agents discovered a staggering 25 kilograms of cocaine inside her checked suitcase. Jade’s mother, Naderia, says the discovery “knocks the breath out of you. This is your child.”
Her father, Gary, recalls Jade telling him she’d landed a new job as an international courier. “She came to me and said ‘Dad, I got a new job.’ She was excited. I deal with this guilt as a dad. Why didn’t I probe? Why didn’t I ask more?”

Four Canadians, one pattern
Jade is one of four Canadians arrested in Hong Kong. None of the imprisoned Canadians know each other in Canada. But the two youngest, Jade and Omar, who turned 20 and 21 while incarcerated, are both from the same region of Ontario. The other two are older and are from the Greater Toronto Area.
Prison chaplain and advocate for foreign detainees in Hong Kong, Father John Wotherspoon, says the cases share striking similarities and likely represent only “the tip of the iceberg.”
“There obviously has to be a connection. … If we know of four, there’s probably maybe another dozen or so that we don’t know about,” Father John says.

Connected stories, same name
During short, 15‑minute prison visits, similarities in the detainees’ accounts became clear. All four used the same name for the network’s boss: a person who goes by the name “Dot” and represents himself online as a period.
Victims and sources say the so‑called “Dot network” is actively recruiting young people in the Kitchener‑Waterloo area despite the arrests in Hong Kong.

Threats and intimidation
W5 interviewed two people who were scheduled to make a delivery but didn’t proceed. Each claimed “Dot” sent them threatening messages over an encrypted messaging app with threats of death if they didn’t find other people to take their place.
“Dot was also threatening to kill me and threatening to shoot up my house, ” said ”Lee," whose real identity we are protecting.
Lee claims to know dozens of young people who have travelled to Hong Kong, believing they were making entirely legal deliveries.
“I’ve heard stories and seen photos of people who said they’ve done it, and they showed photos of them in Hong Kong,” he said.
- If you have tips on this, or any other story, reach out to avery.haines@bellmedia.ca or Joseph.loiero@bellmedia.ca

Police response
Staff Sgt. Ian Young of Waterloo Regional Police, who heads the drug squad, confirms investigators are probing cases of social‑media recruitment for overseas trafficking.
“We are aware of a trend of some people being recruited through social media to transport drugs to other countries,” he said.
Young described the investigation as a “high‑priority case” involving the RCMP and Canada Border Services, and warned that such offers often prey on “people’s innocence and trust.”
“It’s obviously concerning that there is a network of people operating in our region. An opportunity that may seem like a golden opportunity may not be that,” he said.
Advocates in Hong Kong warn that this is not an isolated phenomenon. Father John Wotherspoon and legal advocates warn that dismantling the network is difficult because masterminds never touch the drugs, and communications are routinely deleted.




