As much as 80% of the world’s maple syrup comes from the region, according to the Federation, which manages the world’s only strategic maple syrup reserve.

The theft was discovered during a routine inventory check of the warehouse when officials realized that a significant amount of barrels originally containing the syrup were empty, concluding that it had been transferred to other containers during the heist.

According to the Guardian, Quebec police arrested 16 people in connection with the crime at the time. Ringleader Richard Vallières, who intended to resell the stolen syrup in smaller batches for profit, was found guilty of fraud, trafficking and theft in 2016, and subsequently sentenced to eight years in prison.

Vallières was also ordered to pay a $9 million dollar fine, which he has a decade to pay off, otherwise he may face an additional six years in prison, according to CBC.

The incident was the subject of a 2018 episode of Netflix’s corporate greed and corruption docuseries “Dirty Money.”

“People wanted to sell more of their maple syrup. Why couldn’t they? It was because it was government regulated, that’s why,” Martindale said. “That was fascinating to learn.”

All six episodes of “The Sticky” are available to stream on Prime Video.

By Alli Rosenbloom, CNN