Pubdate: Sun, 15 Aug 2004 Source: Alameda Times-Star, The (CA) Copyright: 2004 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.timesstar.com/Stories/0,1413,125%257E1524%257E,00.html Website: http://www.timesstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/731 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) SMUGGLERS HEADING THROUGH CANADIAN DOOR The remote East Bank Trail, which snakes south from a campground at the U.S.-Canada border, would seem about the last place on Earth you'd expect to run into a 23-year-old aspiring Palestinian terrorist. The apprehension of Abu Mezer nearly eight years ago marked an end of innocence for the North Cascades National Park complex. With enforcement stepped up in populated areas to the west, the smuggling of people and "B.C. Bud" marijuana has spilled over into the wild environs of the "American Alps." "When you squeeze the balloon, it will bulge somewhere else," said Joseph Giuliano, assistant chief patrol agent with the U.S. Border Patrol in Blaine. John Madden, the enthusiastic National Park Service ranger who patrols Ross Lake, said "drugs, guns and people are moving, that we know," down the fjordlike reservoir that extends from Seattle City Light's 505-foot-tall Ross Dam to a point just north of the border. Madden was, last week, performing the never predictable work that constitutes the regular routine for a ranger in the wilderness. He spotted a white canoe and nudged his patrol boat over at the remote Little Beaver Creek campground and trailhead. Madden had the tough task of informing a Vancouver, B.C., man and his two sons of a death in the family. He arranged for another boat to carry them up the lake to Hozomeen, where a 45-mile gravel road leads to the Trans-Canada Highway. Not long ago, however, Madden came across a kayaker struggling in the waves that blow up on Ross Lake. With newly rented gear, he appeared to be an unlikely outdoorsman. At that point the kayaker revealed his cargo, 22 kilos of B.C. Bud. "Am I in trouble?" he asked Madden. "You are now," the ranger replied. The Park Service will joke that it apprehends the inept smugglers. Nobody is laughing, however. B.C. Bud is a billion-dollar business, run by people who carefully study law enforcement's response. "This is about organized crime. The last several years have driven that message home," said Pete Cowan, chief ranger for the North Cascades National Park. An example: The lookout at remote Copper Mountain -- one of North America's great mountain viewing points -- spotted what Cowan calls "unusual aircraft activity" far below in the Chilliwack River valley. A road extends down Chilliwack Lake in Canada to within about a mile of the U.S. border. It was built so British Columbia loggers could clearcut the Depot Creek valley to the border of the U.S. national park. Smugglers were hauling B.C. Bud across the 49th Parallel and up the Chilliwack River to a rendezvous location. Bags were dumped for pickup by a helicopter on the American side. "You don't fly a helicopter for $40 an hour," Cowan dryly noted. Canada-based smugglers have shown skill at adapting their country's sporting culture to the demands of business. B.C. Bud is often put into hockey bags in order to keep the plants intact. Avalanche transceivers are used to mark the location of bags for pickup. None of this used to be necessary. During the 1990s, the U.S.-Canada border was stripped of agents, even as Interstate 5 became a two-way drug corridor and rings charged as much as $20,000 to smuggle Asian illegals into the United States. Smugglers even had time on their side. The Border Patrol only had personnel to be on duty 16 hours a day. "We have triple the number of people now, and it's a lot better," said Giuliano. "But that presupposes we had adequate staff. In fact, we were grossly understaffed. In years gone by, we did not have resources on the ground to know what we were facing. We're just getting a handle on that now." The post-9/11 interdiction effort has at least impacted smugglers' traditional way of doing business. It has driven them onto the water. Marine interdictions of B.C. Bud are up substantially. And it has driven smugglers to the east. "What we've seen principally is drug smuggling, not human smuggling," said Cowan. Still, the Park Service recently spotted a fast-moving boat on Ross Lake. The boat apparently struck something that disabled its propeller. It was beached and abandoned. Rangers believe it was used for people smuggling. Madden has also found Korean-language food wrappers along the East Bank trail. Smugglers have come by foot, used boats and kayaks on Ross Lake, deployed airplanes and canoes, and -- in winter -- used snowmobiles to access the East Bank and Ross Lake trailheads on the North Cascades Highway. East of the North Cascades Park complex lies the half-million-acre Pasayten Wilderness Area, less rugged perhaps but even more remote and unpeopled. "If I think we have a tough job with staffing," said Cowan, "all I have to do is look at my counterparts with the U.S. Forest Service. I have eight or nine people to work with. They have two or three." A recent article in Government Executive magazine on patrolling the northern border carried its conclusion in the headline: "Difficult Terrain." As to the shivering illegal apprehended on the East Bank trail eight years ago, therein lies a lesson in the potential cost of complacency. Abu Mezer was sent back to Canada. The Palestinian was apprehended a second time at Peace Arch Park in Blaine. He was again bounced back into the Great White North. The Border Patrol's suspicions grew when it nabbed him a third time at the bus depot in Bellingham. It incarcerated Mezer, and sent the case file to the FBI. Mezer was, however, bailed out at a cost of $5,000 -- by another person in the United States illegally. In the summer of 1997, the New York City Joint Terrorism Task Force apprehended Abu Mezer in a Brooklyn apartment. On the premises were five cylindrical pipe bombs being readied for use on the New York subway system. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin