2012/02/17


The film version of Un Simple Soldat will have to wait. Montreal actor Tony Conte, 48, was sentenced to a prison term of 42 months Thursday for conspiring to purchase cocaine. The fact he became involved in film projects as his trial approached last year was not enough to prove he is rehabilitated, Superior Court Justice Sophie Bourque decided at the Montreal courthouse. In January, a jury convicted Conte on charges of conspiracy and drug possession with intent to traffic. Factoring in time he has already served, Conte has more than 39 months left on his sentence. The actor sighed audibly while listening to Bourque's decision but his face registered little reaction when he learned he was heading to a federal penitentiary. Conte, who acted as a Mafia associate in the 1990s French-language TV series Omertà, had tried to convince Bourque he merited a suspended sentence because he was already rehabilitated. During a sentence hearing on Feb. 2, he testified he slipped into a deep depression after his arrest in October 2008, but recovered months before his jury trial in December and started working on various projects, including a film adaptation of Un Simple Soldat, by Quebec writer Marcel Dubé. Dubé testified at the Feb. 2 hearing that the project was to start production this year, and that Conte held a crucial role as actor and producer. Bourque acknowledged Conte's efforts at resurrecting his career but noted he persisted in lying about how he ended up at a downtown hotel on Oct. 29, 2008, ready to buy 30 kilograms of cocaine from an undercover police officer. During his trial, Conte told the jury he was there to look in on a guest of the hotel at the request of a friend named Diego Guzman Diaz who had resided in St. Léonard. Conte testified the man he knew as Diaz had been kicked out of Canada because of an expired visa and had called him from Mexico to ask that he look in on his ill friend at the hotel. Det.-Sgt. Stephane Durocher told the sentence hearing "Diego" was actually Vladimir Estenssoro, 42, of Bolivia who was removed from Canada three times in the past decade for residing here illegally under aliases. In 1999, Estenssoro - a suspected street gang member - was convicted of trafficking in several kilos of cocaine in Montreal. While in prison, he hung out with members of the Hells Angels, according to Parole Board of Canada records. On Thursday, Bourque said Conte's insistence on maintaining his false version of events - even after a jury rejected it - is a sign he has not been rehabilitated. Bourque determined that Conte merited a sentence similar to that of Anthony Riccio, 54, whom Conte described as his partner while making his deal with the undercover agent. Riccio was sentenced to a 42-month prison term after pleading guilty to conspiracy and drug trafficking charges in 2010.

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