Pubdate: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 Source: Time Magazine (Canada) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.timecanada.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1115 Author: Anita Hamilton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/BC+Bud Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) THIS BUD'S FOR THE U.S. American law enforcers are blaming Canada's relaxed drug laws for a huge inflow of potent, pricey, brand-name marijuana It was the bus driver who noticed something suspicious. According to school officials, a driver for Blaine High School in northwestern Washington State thought something was strange about students' carrying unusually full bags to school and then never taking them back home. He alerted U.S. authorities, who boarded the bus on the morning of Feb. 20 and allegedly found 3.6 kg of marijuana, valued at $25,000, hidden inside a teenage girl's backpack. Prosecutors allege that the minor, 16, was getting paid $300 a trip to work as a drug mule for smugglers moving marijuana into the U.S. from Canada. The teen's home, in Point Roberts, Washington, borders British Columbia in an area with relatively light border patrol, which would have made it easy for her to get the drugs from Canada before boarding the bus. Expelled from school and charged with possessing marijuana with intent to deliver, the girl has a hearing scheduled for Aug. 23 in Bellingham, Washington. Deputy prosecutor Thomas Verge has said he will probably ask for an exceptionally long sentence that would put the teen behind bars until her 21st birthday. The controversy has upset the community. "She was a wonderful young girl," says her principal, Dan Newell. "I wouldn't have ever thought that if anyone was going to haul marijuana across the border, it would be this lady." Nor would anyone have thought that the cross-border traffic of illegal drugs would become one of the knottiest areas of disagreement between the U.S. and its northern neighbor. An estimated 800 to 2,000 tons of marijuana are grown in Canada, according to a new report from Canadian police. About 90% of the commercial crop winds up in the U.S., where its street value is worth at least $5 billion. Although only 5% of the pot in the U.S. comes from Canada, the trade is flourishing because of high demand in the U.S. and the comparatively mild punishments in Canada for growers and traffickers. The U.S. confiscated more than 21,000 kg of marijuana along the Canadian border last year, nearly double the 11,800 kg it retrieved in 2002, according to a U.S. State Department report. There have been seizures all along the border, in Montana, North Dakota, Michigan, Ohio and other states as well. Canadian pot has cachet in the U.S. because of its reputation as being especially potent. The featured brand is BC Bud--which is grown in British Columbia and has become synonymous with the high-grade marijuana grown throughout Canada. Once in the U.S., the pot is exchanged for cash, and sometimes cocaine or guns, which are then smuggled back to Canada. Although the actual potency of BC Bud varies from batch to batch, depending on how it's grown, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says it contains as much as 25% of the psychoactive drug tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). In contrast, the pot that the hippie generation smoked in the 1970s had only 2% thc content, and most pot consumed in the U.S. today averages about 7% THC. White House drug czar John Walters blames BC Bud in part for the increased numbers of pot-related emergency-room incidents in the U.S., which have more than doubled, from 54,000 in 1996 to 119,000 in 2002. Those incidents range from accidents and injuries to unexpected reactions to the drug. "Canada is exporting to us the crack of marijuana," Walters told reporters in April. Others dispute Walters' claims. "Domestic American marijuana is probably a little bit better," says Richard Stratton, editor in chief of High Times, a magazine that covers marijuana issues. But the BC Bud name is so well regarded that some dealers pass off other varieties as Canadian to fetch the $6,000-to-$20,000-per-kg price. And BC Bud seems to be everywhere. "It's hella easy to get," says "Angelo," 22, a Seattle resident who asked to be identified by a pseudonym. "You can usually go to [a convenience store] between 1:30 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. and ask people who you think smoke bud," he says. On the Canadian side, the drug is even more ubiquitous. A report released last month by Statistics Canada suggests an increase in pot use across the country; 12.2% of Canadians age 15 or older--about 3 million people--said they used marijuana at least once in the 12 months prior to the 2002 survey. That's almost double the 1989 figure of 6.5%. At the popular New Amsterdam Cafe in downtown Vancouver, customers openly smoke pot. The cafe doesn't sell the stuff itself, but it is easy to obtain from street dealers and other shops in the area. "People come with pot. We are a business, though, so we have a $2 minimum cafe charge [for snacks and drinks]," says cafe manager Scott Heardy. Inspector David Nelmes, who is in charge of drugs for the Vancouver police department, tells Time, "I can't remember the last time a member of the Vancouver police department arrested someone for smoking a joint. Frankly, who's got time?" Canada's new Health Minister, Ujjal Dosanjh, says he is concerned about the apparent rise in use but is still committed to decriminalizing the drug. "My view is that if you make something illegal, some people are more attracted to it," Dosanjh told reporters when the StatsCan survey was released. "If you allow people to possess it in small quantities for personal use, the allure kind of disappears." The Liberals say that when Parliament resumes in October, they will reintroduce legislation that would decriminalize possession of less than 15 grams of marijuana, meaning that offenders would be slapped with the equivalent of a traffic ticket. That approach is a far cry from the one that exists in U.S. states like Oklahoma, where a person caught smoking dope could get up to a year in prison, although probation is more common. Canada's attitude toward small-scale toking up has led some U.S. officials to blame it for exacerbating America's drug problems. "If the perception is that it will be easier to get marijuana in Canada . then it creates problems at the border," Paul Cellucci, U.S. ambassador to Canada, said at a Toronto Board of Trade dinner in February. Indeed, according to Canadian police, the trade has led to an increase in drive-by shootings in Canada by rival dealers and "grow-rips," in which competing clans break into growers' homes to steal their crops. The body of the suspected ring leader of a trafficking group was found in a ditch, stabbed in the neck, in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, in November 2002. "It's still a dangerous drug," says James Capra, the U.S. DEA's chief of domestic operations. "People are killing each other over it." Currently, a grower who is convicted in Canada can expect less than two years of house arrest and a trafficker anywhere from three months to five years, served either at home or in prison, in contrast to the minimum punishment of five to 10 years that most convicted traffickers and growers receive in U.S. federal court. But as the violence has increased and cultivation of the crop has moved into residential areas, Canada has begun cracking down on its estimated 50,000 commercial pot growers. Over the past four years, police in Vancouver have seized $288 million worth of marijuana and $8.7 million worth of growing equipment. In Barrie, Ont., this past January, police confiscated 30,000 marijuana plants, worth $23 million, inside a former Molson brewery. One hot, muggy morning in July, a Time reporter accompanied the Vancouver police on a raid at a two-story brick-and-panel house on a leafy street of manicured lawns. Inside, officers discovered an entire basement filled with glossy female cannabis bushes. This bust is now pretty routine, and so is the response by the growers. They simply set up shop elsewhere in town. --Reported by Ben Bergman/Blaine, Laura Blue/New York, Chris Daniels/Toronto, Deborah Jones/Vancouver and Elaine Shannon/Washington Blowing Smoke: The Branding of BC Bud What's in a name? About $150 more an ounce. That's the premium that U.S. pot smokers are willing to pay for BC Bud, even though Canadian pot is no better than the high-quality domestic stuff. Why fork over so much more for the same buzz? For the same reason fashionistas buy $180 designer jeans when they can buy store-label jeans for a third of the price. Canada's cannabis is cooler. "Basically, BC Bud is marketing," says Michael Delaney, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration supervisory special agent who oversees marijuana investigations in Northern California. Like old-favorite labels Acapulco Gold and Maui Waui, BC Bud is among the brand-name elite of marijuana by virtue of its availability, its consistent quality and the status the brand confers. All make BC Bud more attractive to consumers than cheaper generics. Like Cuban cigars, BC Bud also has the contraband cachet of being singled out. "Our government here has puffed up that product," says Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the U.S. National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. Along the borders, law enforcers have been stepping up their numbers, concerned not only about BC Bud but also about the money-laundering rackets and encroachment by Canadian organized-crime groups that accompany it. Border drug busts have spiraled upward. This creates news and reinforces the brand equity. With headlines like POTENT POT PROBLEM ARRIVES and A TRIP TO "VANSTERDAM," U.S. newspapers hype Canadian marijuana--and the notion that it's much stronger than other marijuana imports. Comparisons to Mexican marijuana, which typically arrives in the U.S. in compressed bricks containing stems and seeds--as opposed to just the bud or flower of the plant, as BC Bud's name suggests--make BC Bud seem like some kind of superdrug. Still, the principal promoters of BC Bud are the ones who stand to make the most from it: dealers and growers working hard to market their product. And, as with so many chichi brands, counterfeiters pass off fakes to cash in on a hot label. "If you grow marijuana here in San Francisco, and you do a good job, and it's good stuff," says Delaney, "you can say, `Hey, this is BC Bud,' and people will pay more for it." And even if they do get cheated, they aren't going to call the cops to complain. --By Laura Blue - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin