Pubdate: Fri, 02 Aug 2002 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Page: A5 Copyright: 2002, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Brent Jang UNDERCOVER ACTION ENDS IN DRUG BUST ON B.C. FERRY Labrador Retriever Trained To Sniff Drugs Finds Seven Kilograms Of Pot In Car Trunks VICTORIA -- Police are praising a program that led to eight drug arrests on a West Coast ferry, where plainclothes officers with sniffer dogs tracked down marijuana while strolling the car deck. Twice, a drug-sniffing Labrador retriever sat down next to a car after scenting marijuana from the trunk, Staff Sergeant Douglas Bruce of West Vancouver police said yesterday. "When the dogs smell the odour of a controlled substance, they simply sit down," Staff Sgt. Bruce said. "We went on the ferry with the intent of not alarming anybody to our being there. "It was a very covert operation," he said. Staff Sgt. Bruce hailed this week's Operation High Seas as a success, but John Dixon, president of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, criticized police, saying they abused their powers and wasted valuable resources to seize seven kilograms of marijuana. "The trunk of your vehicle enjoys at least as great a claim to privacy as your underwear drawer," Mr. Dixon said. "Unless the police have reasonable and probable grounds, they do not have a right to subject your private materials to search." During the ferries' busy summer season, the prospect of further "fishing expeditions" by plainclothes police will deprive passengers of enjoying their privacy in what should be a laid-back journey, Mr. Dixon argued. Police arrested eight people during Tuesday's search conducted over the course of four trips between Horseshoe Bay in West Vancouver and Nanaimo on Vancouver Island. Three people have been charged. A 43-year-old man and 30-year-old woman from Lasqueti Island, travelling together to Nanaimo, face charges of possession for the purpose of trafficking. A 37-year-old man from Lantzville, B.C., also faces a drug-trafficking charge after being arrested during a trip to West Vancouver. Police arrested five others who were caught smoking marijuana cigarettes on the car deck, but those five were released because the goal was to catch traffickers, not nab puffing passengers, Staff Sgt. Bruce said. He defended the operation, saying that police targeted suspected traffickers but did not open trunks immediately. Police seized two cars, then obtained search warrants before unlocking the trunks on police property. A dozen undercover officers and five trained dogs boarded the ferry. They patrolled the car deck but not the upper decks where passengers were, he added. Deborah Dykes, a spokeswoman for the provincial-government-owned B.C. Ferry Corp., which operates the West Coast fleet, said the police provided notice that they would carry out the drug search. Police said there is a pattern of drug traffickers using the ferry system to transport marijuana, so it makes sense to clamp down at terminals and the ferries. Although using dogs on ferries seems a novel way to look for illicit drugs, "it's no different than us walking down the street and smelling marijuana emanating from a house," Staff Sgt. Bruce said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth