Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: 2002 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 DRUG SMUGGLING IS UP ACROSS U.S.-CANADA BORDER BERKSHIRE, Vt. (AP) -- From a farm field about 10 feet from the Canadian border, State Police Sgt. Tom Hango looks through an apple orchard at cars on a back road in Quebec. The rolling farmland separated into two countries by a slash in the trees is called "apple alley" by drug smugglers. Protecting the border is the job of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, which includes the Border Patrol, and the U.S. Customs Service. But since Sept. 11, Hango and other Vermont troopers have been making a habit of driving there, especially at night, looking for anything out of place. Hango is not deterred by the odds against finding anything. "We'll do what we can to protect our state and our country," he said. Hango is one of countless state, provincial and local law enforcement officials on both sides of the U.S-Canadian border who have been paying closer attention since the terrorist attacks. No terrorist-or terrorism-related arrests have been announced, but there have been other payoffs. The number of illegal border crossings is down sharply, and drug seizures and arrests are way up. From October to April, the number of illegal border-crossers dropped 34 percent compared to the same period a year earlier, according to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. The agency says the drop occurred on both the Canadian and Mexican borders. Heightened vigilance is believed to be at least partly responsible. "There is definitely an increased, visible presence on the border," said immigration spokeswoman Amy Otten. "That word gets out among the people who might try to get through illegally. But we really don't know because we aren't talking to people who aren't coming." Smugglers undoubtedly drew lessons from the case of Lucia Garofalo, a Montreal resident arrested at Beecher Falls in December 1999. Authorities originally suspected her of playing a role in a foiled plot to blow up the Los Angeles airport as 2000 dawned, but changed their minds and released her in spring 2002. Officials believe increased vigilance also helps explain the surge in drug arrests on the border, but, again, no one can say for sure. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl