Pubdate: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Lindsay Kines, Times Colonist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers) Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. THE STRAIT DOPE PORT ANGELES - Early on the morning of Jan. 19, the radar system aboard U.S. Coast Guard cutter Orcas picked up a small boat headed across Juan de Fuca Strait. It was just after 2 a.m. and the boat was nearing the Pillar Point recreation area on an isolated beach one hour west of Port Angeles. The coast guard watched as the inflatable speed boat flashed a light toward shore and, a few seconds later, a sedan and pickup truck at the boat launch flicked their lights in response. A romantic rendezvous? A late-night fishing trip? The coast guard didn't think so. They turned on their emergency lights, and the car and truck sped away. The boat darted for shore and its passengers fled into the underbrush. In another time, or another country, they might have escaped, but there are no passes into the United States after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Nobody here has forgotten that it was a border guard at the Coho ferry terminal in Port Angeles who caught Ahmed Ressam with a trunk full of explosives possibly en route to blowing up the Los Angeles airport in 1999. Thus, illegal entries tend to get a fair bit of attention from a wide range of law enforcement agencies here -- no matter what time of day. Two hours after the boat beached, a pair of special agents -- one with the coast guard, the other with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement -- arrived at Pillar Point to begin their investigation. They found an inflatable, rigid-hulled boat, two discarded orange survival suits, and six hockey bags lashed to the boat's interior, according to a sworn affidavit by Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigator Michael Kowalski. The hockey bags contained more than 100 kilograms of a "green leafy substance" in vacuum-sealed plastic bags. Within minutes, nine more vehicles from the Clallam County Sheriff's Department arrived to join the man hunt. A short time later, a pair of detectives in an unmarked police pickup truck spotted two men walking along Highway 112, apparently hitch-hiking, about eight kilometres from Pillar Point. One of the men, later identified as [NAME DELETED], was dressed in neoprene chest waders and black knee-high rubber boots. The other, [NAME DELETED], wore leather wading boots and a one-piece fleece suit matted with grass. As the pickup slowed, [NAMES DELETED] ran towards it, asking the detectives for a ride, apparently unaware that they were speaking to police. "Take us anywhere," they said, according to the affidavit. "We've been walking for six hours." They were Canadians on a camping trip and had their gear stolen, the duo said, perhaps unaware all campsites in the area were closed for the winter. The pair hopped into the back of the pickup truck and promptly lay down, as if to avoid being seen, Kowalski stated in the affidavit. A short time later, more police arrived and arrested the Canadians. [NAME DELETED] refused to talk, but [NAME DELETED] Johnson told investigators: "I don't know what I can say, because I don't want to make a confession." Not that police needed one. U.S. authorities are getting adept at spotting Canadians trying to sneak into the country with their illegal cargo. "It does seem to be always hockey bags," Cmdr. Tom Farris of the U.S. Coast Guard at Port Angeles said. "You guys must have them pretty cheap up there." This year, Farris's crews working with immigration, border patrol, and the local sheriff's department have seized more than 1,000 kilograms of B.C.-grown marijuana and arrested at least 18 people -- many of them Canadians -- in and around the Olympic Peninsula. More seizures have been made in the San Juan Islands. "And we consider it truly only the tip of the iceberg," said San Juan County Sheriff William Cumming. Famous as a people-smuggling route in the late 1800s, and as a rum-smuggling route during prohibition in the 1920s, Juan de Fuca Strait appears to be gaining popularity among modern day bud runners. "We've seen drops where planes have come across and dropped packages on the beach," Cumming said. "We've seen kayakers coming across ... We've seen open boats ... We've seen boats that are fast with large overpowering engines to come in and out quickly. "We've seen them rent safe houses. We've seen them rent vacation homes on the beach where there're drops. We've seen marijuana floating in the water just this past year, suggesting that law enforcement was in the area and somebody panicked." At the same time, boats have started going missing on southern Vancouver Island -- about a dozen a month -- only to turn up beached or docked at some secluded spot across the border, said Victoria police Sgt. Doug Bond. As the United States tightened security at land crossings, law enforcement began picking up more drug smugglers crossing the strait under cover of darkness. It's unclear, however, whether the rise in arrests is due to increased smuggling or better enforcement. "I tend to believe it's a little of each," said Joseph Giuliano of the U.S. Border Patrol at Blaine. His staff has tripled in size to 149 agents, and other agencies also expanded after the Ressam arrest and the 9/11 terror attacks, he said. "And it really made the cost of doing business quite high for the smugglers. They were losing more than they cared to lose as the cost of doing business. So it's like a balloon: When you squeeze it one place, it's gonna have to bulge somewhere else. "And as we put the hammer down out here, we saw numbers start to increase in places like Spokane, Montana, out in the Dakotas. As far out as the Great Lakes even. The other end of that, of course, is they try to go around us through the water. We've certainly seen the impact of that." Giuliano said there were no significant seizures last fiscal year, but already in 2004 his staff have made a number of major busts on the Olympic Peninsula or in Juan de Fuca Strait. "It really has been a banner year out there for them," he said. "It's beyond noticeable, it's a very profound increase in activity, or at least in interdiction." In the Blaine sector alone, which covers western Washington, the border patrol has seized about 2,500 kilograms of marijuana in its current fiscal year, which is a 50 per cent increase. The arrests will likely continue as the Americans increase security forces along the border. Only recently, Immigration and Customs Enforcement opened a Bellingham air and marine branch and began conducting regular patrols in a further effort to shut down drug and human smuggling routes. In the first 10 days, the branch helped catch an alleged smuggler moving about 100 kilograms of B.C. bud by boat to a marina near Sequim. The resources of U.S. agencies were on display recently when the coast guard at Ediz Hook in Port Angeles gave the Times Colonist a quick spin in one of its high-speed patrol boats. Although the two-man crew left most of its firepower at the base during the tour, the inflatable speed boat can carry .60-calibre machine-guns, while individual officers have 9-mm Berettas, M-16 automatic weapon and shotguns at their disposal. They don't waste time, either. "We're required to be underway, either in the air or on the water, 30 minutes after we receive the call," Farris said. "That's driven by search and rescue, but it pays dividends for law enforcement as well." The crews, however, can't be everywhere at once, and there's little doubt that B.C. bud continues to slip past the guards. U.S. defence attorney Stephan Illa, who has represented a number of Canadians accused of smuggling, says there's been such an influx that it's driven local marijuana growers in Washington state out of business. "It's as old as supply and demand," he said. "What you have is a situation where the penalties for growing dope in Canada are far less severe than the penalties for growing it in the U.S." At the same time, the payoff for smuggling it south is huge, Illa said. "The price of a pound of British Columbia marijuana -- high-quality marijuana -- in Canada is approximately anywhere from $3,200 to about $2,800," he said. "You can bring that across the border and get up to $4,000 a pound U.S. So just bringing it across the border has that effect. "The people who are growing it, and moving it and organizing it, these are not the people getting caught. The people getting caught, by and large, are runners who are recruited to take loads across. And the loads that get caught are for the most part considered a cost of doing business." U.S. and Canadian law enforcement authorities contend that organized crime runs the smuggling operations. "You've got the Hells Angels, and there are some Vietnamese groups, as well as some East Indian organized crime groups," U.S. assistant district attorney Janet Freeman said. "Those three groups tend to be largely involved with the drug trade." But Illa said there's been little, if any, proof of that. "They're always talking about Hells Angels being the source of all this stuff," he said. "To the extent the government's ever proved that, I've never seen it. I think it's largely their own theory and it provides them with a big bogeyman to wave in front of the public. "I mean, it's a lot more scary to say it's tattooed motorcycle maniacs in leather, rather than to say, 'Well, there's a group of Canadians up there doing this or, you know, dirt hippies.'" But U.S. and Canadian law enforcement agents say marijuana smuggling is more sinister than Illa or others make it out to be. The police argue that smugglers trade pot for cocaine and guns that, in turn, make their way back to B.C. as part of a large criminal enterprise. "This is not about marijuana," said Farris of the U.S. Coast Guard. "This is not about us arguing about whether personal use of marijuana is OK or not okay. The America-Canadian disconnect there is clear. "But it's really not about that. This is about keeping a civil society, because these folks are all about controlling money, assets, power and they do it their way. So when you're turning your head, or allowing it to exist, you're making other decisions you're maybe not really thinking about." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager