Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 Source: Watertown Daily Times (NY) Copyright: 2004 Watertown Daily Times Contact: http://www.wdt.net Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/792 Author: James R. Donnelly, Times Staff Writer 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. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/border+patrol Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/hydroponic+marijuana ARREST THURSDAY WERE SECOND INTERCEPTION OF BIG POT SHIPMENT IN WEEK MALONE - Two cousins from Hogansburg were jailed Thursday after being charged with having 30 pounds of marijuana in their car. The arrest of [delete] 24, and [delete], 18 both of 359 McGee Road, marked the second time in a week that a major marijuana shipment was intercepted at a U. S. Border Patrol checkpoint near Paul Smiths in southern Franklin County. "They saw our checkpoint and tried to abscond," Leslie M. Lawton, assistant chief patrol agent at Border Patrol sector headquarters in Swanton, VT. , said. Agents pursued their car northward, stopping their car in the town of Duane south of the village of Malone. Members of the state police Troop B Narcotics Enforcement Unit, Ray Brook, were called in and a search turned up the hydroponically grown marijuana. The highly potent marijuana sells for about $2,500 a pound in bulk, Lt. Patrick O. Fonda, Ray Brook, said. "That's about $75,000 retail value. If you sold it in New York City you are probably going to get a lot more for it than if you sold it in a rural area," Mr. Fonda said. They were arraigned in Duane Town Court and were ordered held in Franklin County jail, Malone, in lieu of $50,000 bail each. A week earlier [delete] 23, and [delete] 25, both of Burns-Holden Road, Fort Covington, were jailed after being charged with possessing 53 1/2 pounds of marijuana. It was found at the same border Patrol checkpoint near Paul Smiths. The arrest, and others that have taken place recently across Northern New York, may have more to do with an increase in the number of Border Patrol and other law enforcement officers since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, than with an upsurge in drug smuggling, Ms. Lawton said. "We have over 150 agents now, which is not quite double to where we were before 9-11," Ms Lawton said. "We obviously have more agents on the road." In addition to putting more agents on the road, Ms. Lawton said "We have been able to run more traffic checkpoints." A checkpoint on Route 37, Morristown, resulted in the March 29 arrest of [delete], and [delete], both 19 and of Syracuse, by St. Lawrence County sheriff deputies. They were charged with having 17 pounds in their car. Another checkpoint, on Route 11 in Jefferson County near the St. Lawrence County line, resulted in the March 28 arrest of [delete], 21, of Essex County hamlet of Minerva. He was charged with possessing 5 pounds of marijuana. "It's hard to say where it is coming from. It very well could be coming down from Canada," said Glenn MacNeill, assistant Franklin County district attorney, in Malone. "We are sure it is not grown locally," Mr. MacNeill said. "It is pure speculation to say who is growing it," Lt. Fonda said. "Hydroponic marijuana typically comes from Canada. The vast majority of the seizures we make are hydroponic, which is not grown locally," Ms Lawton said. "There are a variety of groups that find hydroponic marijuana lucrative. So anybody who is an entrepreneur and sets up a growing operation may make a profit," Ms. Lawton said. Much of the marijuana is believed to be entering the United States through the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation, Lt. Fonda said. "There is a long-standing history at the border at Akwesasne or Hogansburg. There are a lot of distribitors along the border. It is an area that is conducive to being able to smuggle this stuff across without being detected," Lt. Fonda said. While marijuana appears to be the drug of choice of smugglers for the moment, three Fulton men were charged recently with selling up to 300,000 Ecstasy pills they bought from a Canadian supplier. The tablets were picked up in Massena, according to police in Oswego County. U. S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents arrested them after they sold 956 tablets to an undercover agent. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin