Pubdate: Sat, 15 May 2004 Source: National Post (Canada) - -421a-802e-d734d37d53bf Copyright: 2004 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Martin Patriquin ON THE REZ WITH MARIJUANA 'PLAYERS' Lots of cash buys big-screen TVs and new cars AKWESASNE - It could be a dorm room, a messy ode to the habits and practices of young, single men. There are dirty dishes piled high in the sink, empty cracker boxes on the counter, cupboards barren except for half-eaten sacks of chips and cookies. There are beer caps on the ceiling, remnants of some drinking game, and an ornate, marijuana-caked glass pipe sits in the centre of the coffee table, next to the PlayStation and a very busy ashtray. Posters of Hilary Duff and Tony Montana, Al Pacino's anti-hero of the cocaine-and-violence movie Scarface, compete for space on the living room wall. On the sofa, Chan and Mondoo, 21 and 20 respectively, are absorbed in a game of NHL 2003, Boston Bruins versus Colorado Avalanche. As they play, they explain, through simple sentences and nonchalant shrugs, how roughly three times a month for the last two years they have made $10,000 in total for about 10 minutes' work. "We transport about 10 pounds at a time," Chan says. "It's all green [marijuana], from Canada to the States. We won't transport immigrants, or nothing. Those are my morals." Ten years ago, smugglers traded in cigarettes. These days, though, it's marijuana that makes money for Akwesasne's young people; employment is difficult to find on the reserve, even harder off. Chan, who still works two days a week at a "legitimate" job on the reserve, got into smuggling after his hours were cut back -- the prospect of making $1,000 off each pound of marijuana became too much to pass up. They certainly aren't alone; one Akwesasne chief said Chan and Mondoo are "a spotlight [on] what our youth is doing." The evidence of their regular windfall isn't all that hard to see. The house, which Chan and another roommate rent, may be of the mobile variety, but the two are playing NHL hockey on one of two $3,000 big screen televisions. There are new snowmobiles, boats, speed bikes and a shiny black $35,000 Chevy Suburban in the yard. The Suburban is in good company on Akwesasne roads: Cadillac SUVs are also popular, as are modified Ford Excursions and even Hummers. Mondoo has big plans to build a house on a piece of waterfront property nearby for his wife and child. That's way in the future though; in a month's time, the two will be in Jamaica for a two-week vacation with friends. Chan and Mondoo (their nicknames; neither wanted to be identified) have no compunction about smuggling marijuana from their community of Snye, about a 15-minute drive from Cornwall, Ont., on the Canadian side of the Akwesasne reserve to the part of the reserve in New York State -- a mere two kilometres from Chan's doorstep. They do it partly to afford a lifestyle they say is otherwise unattainable in Akwesasne, and to stave off the day-to-day monotony of living on a reserve. And contrary to what any one of the five police forces that patrol the reserve will tell you, Chan and Mondoo say smuggling marijuana doesn't involve guns, violence or the moving of illegal aliens across the border. For them, it's a matter of taking a duffle bag from one end of the reserve to the other. "They make it sound like we're killing people," Mondoo says in a disaffected baritone, as he eases a digital Paul Kariya down the ice. He pauses, and then mutters a common sentiment in Akwesasne, where police often have about as good a reputation as the various governments that employ them. "S--t, they put us here." - - - - Marijuana is a perfect product, as far as smuggling is concerned. It usually takes less than three months to produce, from seed to harvest, with less effort than either cocaine or Ecstasy. Pound for pound, marijuana is considerably more lucrative than a human being -- and quieter, too. A shopping-bag full can be worth upwards of $12,000, and as Dick Ashlaw, agent in charge at the U.S. Border Patrol (USBP), helpfully points out, "That shopping bag can't testify against you in court." Ashlaw, a thick-boned Texan with a deceptively pleasant way about him, knows his American borders. He spent 14 years in El Paso, patrolling the divide between the United States and Mexico, and all its miseries. He misses Texas and will likely retire there in a few years, but until then he oversees the American side of what he calls the "logistical nightmare" of the meandering border that splits Akwesasne in two. In the lobby of the border patrol headquarters in Massena, an unremarkable upstate New York burg about 50 kilometres from Akwesasne, is an imposing, Plexiglas-shielded model of Akwesasne and its surrounding area. At the western point is the Moses-Sanders Power Dam, through which the border cuts cleanly down the middle. The dam is an anomaly for a couple of reasons: It is one of the few structures built in partnership between the U.S. and Canadian governments, and it supplies power to both countries. It is also the only place on the model where the border between the two countries is remotely straight. "From here west it's as straight as a dime, past the Great Lakes. It's the 49th parallel, all the way to the Pacific," Ashlaw says, his hands splayed on the Plexiglas, lending a shadow to upstate New York. He draws a finger east, highlighting the jagged line that makes its way toward Quebec. "This here, well, it looks like someone was drunk, by the look of the way it runs." In many cases, houses in Akwesasne are in different countries than their backyards. Were they playing football rather than patrolling an international border, the USBP strategy would be best described as "flooding the zone." Ashlaw concentrates manpower and resources on one specific area to root out a problem so as to "gain control of an area," and push it elsewhere. It is an approach used against drugs, weapons and just about anything else that can be smuggled. It is the technique employed on the U.S.-Mexico border. Agents focus on one smuggling hot spot, so that the trouble moves on. The football lexicon is apt, it seems. Ashlaw sees smuggling as something of a game. "It's like playing hide-and-seek when you're a kid. When you learn all the good hiding places, it's easy to find them. When they change them, it takes you a while to find them again. It's a never-ending circle." And how is the game going in Akwesasne? "I don't think we have control of that area." For the most part, Ashlaw says, the smuggling of aliens is a thing of the past. After 9/11, "our apprehension of undocumented aliens dropped right off the chart. Since Sept. 11, we haven't caught as many as we did in 2001. It just stopped. But our marijuana seizures went from ounces to tons. Lots of cash, lots of drugs, no people." The reasons behind the change are both serious and practical. The native population from the United States and Canada represented a big chunk of the work force that helped build the Twin Towers, and many were from Akwesasne. According to Ashlaw, after 9/11, smuggling people was no longer seen as a victimless crime; one of those aliens might be linked to the likes of al-Qaeda. As for the prevalence of Canadian-grown marijuana in the United States, according to a recent U.S. Department of State report, U.S. law enforcement seized 48,087 pounds of marijuana along the U.S.-Canada border in 2002, nearly double the amount of the year before. A host of organized crime syndicates brings a steady flow of high-quality marijuana into Akwesasne from Quebec and Ontario. One older smuggler on the reserve says he deals mostly with Asian gangs, though he has done business with the Hells Angels as well. Supply of the prized, potent marijuana renowned in the United States is never a problem, Chan says. Ashlaw rolls his eyes grandly, and leans back in his chair when asked what he thinks of Canadian drug laws regarding marijuana. "Job security," he answers, with perfect timing. - - - - Peter Garrow, Akwesasne's director of education, often winces before opening a newspaper, because he knows he will usually see something about smuggling. "[Smuggling] has a detrimental effect on the community as a whole," he says. "The youth are being used in the trade. It permeates a sense of not thinking of the future, not having a value system. It gives the community a bad name." After a weary pause, Mr. Garrow exhales through his nose and in one short sentence, spat out with frustration, he sums up the allure of bringing drugs from one place on the reserve to another. "There's a lot of money involved." - - - - Sitting in his deep leather La-Z-Boy, Gator says he could tell you specifically where all that pot came from, just by looking at it. He prefers the stuff from Montreal. He is a veteran smuggler, though he doesn't like the word. He prefers "player," and he is high up on the scale, as far as players are concerned. He is known by his reputation as a man who runs a tight crew, but who prefers to make connections among buyers, sellers and transporters, for a fee. Like chez Chan, his house isn't much to look at -- unfinished facade with stacks of masonry lying on flapping sheet plastic -- but inside it looks like something out of a catalogue. The hardwood floors are freshly varnished. There are leather couches and another one of those enormous, all-consuming televisions. There are the requisite powerful vehicles in the yard. His younger children could do laps in the hot tub in the adjacent den. Everything smells new, as this part of the house is an extension of his older one. You'd think Gator should be happy, but he isn't really. He says Akwesasne is "too much like jail," and realizes his lifestyle is ultimately "destructive." Despite this, he will never leave here and probably won't stop smuggling. Plus, he's bored. Short, wiry and effusive, with dark hair and eyes filled with distracted intensity, Gator (a pseudonym) talks in quick, expletive-laden jabs, squirming with energy as he does so. His restlessness has led him to start his own landscaping company recently, just for something to do. He didn't go to the bank to get a loan. Indeed, he doesn't keep his money in a bank. No, the whole operation was bankrolled with cash earned through years of smuggling. By his own account, he has more money than he knows what to do with, testimony not so much to a good work ethic as the profitability of moving marijuana. "Back in the day, you had to do it for a living to get nice stuff," he says, shifting his weight around in the La-Z-Boy. "Today, you have to do it once. One time. You do it twice a year, you're set." Being "set." It is what Gator (and Mondoo and Chan, and most smugglers in general) profess to crave. Not on the reserve, though, since no one cares about wealth there. "Power, money, none of it means s--t. There's no class system on the reserve," Gator says. Instead, they buy expensive cars and live extravagantly off the reserve, when they visit Cornwall and neighbouring Massena in New York State, or especially Montreal and Toronto. Gator is proud of a Christmas excursion to Montreal, a three-day partying binge, during which he says he rented nine rooms at the downtown Delta Hotel for his family and friends. "I blew $15,000," he says proudly, pausing for effect. "U.S." "It's just so that you can walk into a bar and people say, 'Hey, there he is.' It makes you feel good. You can be the guy they talk about. When I'm in Cornwall, I can be anyone I like." By his own count, he has been to jail eight times since the late '80s for a variety of smuggling-related charges and had a long, all-too-common problem with using the products he smuggled. "I was on the s--t, I was wasting my life in a trailer, you know?" He laughs. "I was making a hundred grand a f---ing week, but I blew it all! I partied it all!" He is also wanted in the United States. Going to the States would mean risking capture -- an inconvenience, since he has to cross the U.S.-Canada border to get to Cornwall, or anywhere else on the reserve, for that matter. When he leaves his house, it isn't usually by car, but by boat, or snowmobile, over the water to Cornwall, where he keeps a couple of nice cars. He says he is paranoid a lot of the time and fatalistic when it comes to the future, fully expecting to get thrown in jail again at some point. He has a yard full of motorized toys, but can't do much other than race them on the river, or around the enormous dirt track that touches a stand of trees at the back of his property. So he makes money -- a lot of it -- partly to finance the renovations to his house, partly to pay for the next outing to Toronto and partly to make sure his children have enough money so they don't fall into the same, tempting trap as he did. These days, it's easy, he says, because he uses a broker to set up deals for others. "Today, anybody can do it," he says, laughing ruefully. "Any Native American can walk down the street in Montreal and get anything. You can go into New York City, and you can f---in' just walk into a motel and ask the doorman, 'Where can I get some weed, man?' And he'll hook you up. Then the guy says, 'Where you from, Akwesasne?' 'Can you get me a hundred pounds?' It's that easy." Easy as it is, smuggling stops with him, Gator says. His swears his children will never see the inside of a smuggling boat, or know what a hundred pounds of marijuana feels like when it's packed tight inside a duffle bag. "I went to jail. They won't." "I don't get any assistance from anybody," Gator says, defending a lifestyle he admits he doesn't particularly like. "I don't let my woman go on welfare, or anything. I been like that since five years now. I pay cash for everything I buy. "To me, it's just a game. 'Ah, I made a hundred grand this week. Ahh, I lost a hundred grand last week.' It's s--t like that, you know? And it's a gamble. It's a big risk, you know?" - - - - Mondoo doesn't do drugs. He concentrates only on video hockey as Chan takes a pull of that glass pipe. Chan, meanwhile, says marijuana is the farthest he ever went, or will go. Chan has his own code for what he will and won't bring over the border. "It sounds gay, but I don't want to bring cocaine [to the reserve]," he says, a little embarrassed at the admission. "I don't want it to go up Akwesasne's nose. There's enough already, I don't want to bring more." That said, they aren't even smuggling, according to Chan. "It's free trade," he says. "It's called fundraising!" Mondoo adds loudly. "We're not smugglers," Chan says again. "We're just cool dudes who like to hang out and make money." Neither will say when they will go out next, or exactly where they make pick-ups and drop-offs. It certainly won't be tonight; there's a girlfriend on the phone and more electronic hockey to play. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh