This is part two 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.
An exclusive W5 investigation has unmasked a chilling recruitment playbook used to trick young people into becoming unsuspecting drug mules.
Four Canadians have been arrested in Hong Kong in the past four months, carrying a total of nearly 100 kilograms of cocaine in their checked suitcases, arriving in the country on separate flights.
One of them, then-19-year-old Jade from Cambridge, Ont., left her Instagram logged in before she boarded her ill-fated flight, revealing details of how she hired for what she thought was a legitimate job.
How we unravelled the playbook
Inside the laptop the teen left behind, W5 found a digital roadmap that exposes the step‑by‑step grooming process. In just three weeks, Jade went from answering a post about a job opportunity to being behind bars in Hong Kong, charged with trafficking 25 kilograms of cocaine into the country.
Jade’s Instagram account suggests she thought she had been hired for a legitimate job as an “international package shipper,” with a salary of $5,000 per trip.
Her recruiter texted her: “We pay your flights, accommodation, food.”

The only job requirements listed:
- Be above 18
- Have no criminal record
- Have a valid passport
One exchange shows the recruiter dangling a “$250 per person” referral bonus if Jade could find other people to “join the team.”

The chats reveal Jade’s numerous attempts to verify that she wasn’t doing anything illegal or dangerous.
“How do i know I’m not about to be kidnapped and enslaved,” Jade asked.
The reply?
“omg hell no. I’m 19 myself and would NOT put anyone in danger like that,” the message read. “I send all my closest homies and I’ve even sent my girl best friend as well. Purely business.”

Jade was such an inexperienced flyer that her recruiter had to explain to her that food is free on her international flight.
‘Rolling up a snowball and tossing it in hell’
Jade’s mother, Naderia, describes reading the chats with the recruiter as “sickening.”
“He’s rolling up a snowball, and tossing it in hell,” she said.
A second Canadian imprisoned in Hong Kong is from the same region in southwestern Ontario as Jade. Omar, 21, says he was lured in by acquaintances who told him many other young people had made the trip and that it was completely legal.
From prison interviews with each of the four Canadians, who don’t know each other back in Canada, there is evidence that they were lured in by the same network.
They each gave the same name of the “big boss,” a man who only communicates on encrypted messaging apps, whose handle is just a period and who calls himself DOT.

They were all flown on the same airline, booked into the same hotel in Hong Kong, were ordered to check in every two minutes after landing and told to use currency serial numbers as a password for picking up and dropping off their delivery.
- If you have a tip about this or any other story, contact avery.haines@bellmedia.ca or joseph.loiero@bellmedia.ca
Why Hong Kong?
There is a huge demand for cocaine in Hong Kong, where it is the drug of choice for the affluent. The cost of cocaine is about $200 a gram - more than double what it typically costs in Canada.
Hong Kong’s drug penalties are severe. Unless the four Canadians can prove they were unaware of the contraband, they face life sentences.



