Pubdate: Fri, 22 Jul 2005 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Jonathan Fowlie and Brad Badelt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) TUNNEL SCHEME BURIED Police Say Men Planned To Charge $1,000 Per Kilogram To Smuggle B.C. Bud Through A Cramped Tunnel Under The Canada-U.S. Border With its dilapidated white farmhouse, and tired looking greenhouse, the property on Zero Avenue in Aldergrove was not much to look at, but Francis Devandra Raj was willing to pay close to $595,000 to get his hands on it. According to police, however, the 30-year-old Surrey resident was not thinking of the house, or of what it would take to restore it into a country treasure, when he made a down payment of close to $300,000 in cash last March. Instead, police say, Raj appeared to be thinking of the rickety Quonset hut in the driveway, and -- more importantly -- of the 100 or so metres that separated it from a vacant, cedar-shaded house sitting just across the border in Washington state. He saw the possibility of building one of the most sophisticated tunnels ever constructed under the U.S. border, police say, and a chance to become a major conduit to smuggle B.C.'s coveted marijuana into the United States. To do that, however, Raj and his two business partners would need to dig a four-foot-wide tunnel that stretched longer than a football field without raising the suspicions of the police or customs agents who were on constant patrol at the border crossing about 500 metres from both properties. Through court documents and a series of interviews, authorities revealed for the first time on Thursday the details of that plot, as well as some insight into the investigative work on both sides of the border that broke up the smuggling ring within days of its first shipment. "Collectively we have dismantled a criminal organization that was capable of causing damage to both Canadian and American societies," Kim Scoville of Canada Customs said at a press conference on Thursday. "The case is an example of how Canadian and American authorities are working together to combat organized crime," added John McKay of the U.S. Attorney Office. On Thursday, McKay and others told the media of how Raj and his partners carefully planed to build the tunnel, and how they had each established a cover story from very early in the process. In fact, not long after buying the property, Raj was on the doorstep of Julie Luke, his new next-door neighbour, telling her how he wanted to start an auto body repair shop in the Quonset hut. True to his word, Raj and his two partners, Timothy Woo, 34, and Johnathan Valenzuela, 27, would arrive at the property in Langley Township from their Surrey homes about 8 a.m. each day and disappear into the hut. But police say that instead of pounding out dented cars, the three would pick up their shovels and begin digging towards their expected fortune. Working six days a week, and often until as late as 9 p.m. or 10 p.m., the three soon built a concrete foundation for the opening of their tunnel, as well as a winch system to hoist the dirt that had been displaced from the hole below. In the early going, things appeared to be proceeding to plan. The two-storey Washington house across the street from where the tunnel would end had already been purchased, the neighbours along the street weren't snooping and the three were even able to find different locations to dump the dirt when they hauled it away in a trailer every two days. What they couldn't have known, however, was that the authorities were already on to them. An investigator with Canada's Border Services Agency, who had been led to Raj as part of a cocaine investigation, had already become suspicious of the dirt they were hauling away from their hut, as well as the supplies they were hauling in to help reinforce the tunnel as they dug. By January of 2005, the investigator had reached the conclusion the trio must be building a tunnel, and figured it must be going under the border and into the U.S. Within weeks, several agencies in both the U.S. and Canada figured they knew what the three were doing. Instead of pouncing right away, however, the agencies opted to wait until the tunnel was built so they could catch the three in the act of breaking the law. To lay the groundwork for their eventual case, and to get a better understanding of what was going on underground, authorities on both sides of the border began to watch the three as closely as they could without tipping them off. While the men laboured with shovels to move dirt and rock almost 10 feet below the surface, authorities patiently watched and waited. Many mornings when they arrived, the men would come with two-by-six boards and rebar that they would painstakingly use to reinforce every inch of the tunnel's walls and ceiling. It was being built to last. Accordingly, the men also outfitted the tunnel with its own ventilation shaft, its own power and with a sump pump that would turn on every 12 minutes to get rid of the groundwater that would have accumulated on the plywood floor. By all accounts, their tunnel, which was finally completed on July 14, was shaping up to be the best that had ever been built into the U.S. "It probably is one of the most significant, if not the most significant, tunnel that we've seen enter the United States," said Rodney Benson, a special agent with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. "They were more sophisticated than we gave them credit for," said Insp. Pat Fogarty, with the Organized Crime Agency of B.C. "That's quite a venture to undertake." In anticipation of the tunnel's completion, the men had also already been speaking with people who were interested in using it for moving drugs. They had even established a price list, telling one trafficker they would charge $500 per pound of marijuana smuggled through, adding they could run loads of up to 300 pounds at a time. What they didn't know, however, was that by July 2, authorities on both sides of the border had already been into their tunnel, and had shortly after set up two cameras in the three-bedroom Washington house where the tunnel was to finish. Not knowing this, however, and thinking that everything was still going according to plan, the men did a test run with a dummy package on July 14, the day the tunnel was completed. By the next day, police say they were dragging two hockey bags filled with marijuana through the tunnel and into a waiting van. Even though things appeared to be going well, however, the men still played it safe. Greg Gassett, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent said on Thursday that on days of the runs, the men would take the bags to the hut early in the morning, but, fearing detection by police, would attempt a number of diversions, or "burn runs," before taking it out on the other side. In once case, Gassett said, the men drove to a parking lot or rest stop and sat for hours at a time before returning to their tunnel. In another, he added, they drove to Seattle and switched cars before returning. Likely thinking they had gone undetected on July 15, authorities said Woo and Raj repeated the process the next day, this time hauling a hockey bag and several black trash bags, which they loaded into a vehicle with Utah licence plates driven by Valenzuela. Valenzuela drove off and agents followed him to the Bellis Fair Mall, north of Bellingham, where they say he met a woman with a small child and handed off the vehicle. Drug enforcement agents who searched that vehicle later found 93 kilograms of marijuana in a hockey bag, a gym bag and two garbage bags. Possibly scared off by the catch, Woo and Valenzuela did not take any marijuana through the tunnel the next day, although they did take the opportunity to smuggle U.S. beer north of the border into Canada. Altogether, in the space of about a week, the men dragged close to 200 pounds of marijuana through the tunnel and into the U.S., enough investigators thought, to make a solid case against all three. As a result, police in the U.S. moved in Wednesday and arrested the three, charging them with conspiracy to distribute marijuana and conspiracy to import marijuana. On Thursday, the three men were brought into U.S. District Court in Seattle, where a magistrate ordered them to be locked up at the federal detention center near Seattle. A hearing to determine whether they will remain behind bars was set for Tuesday. At the same time, Woo pleaded not guilty to an earlier charge, from 1999, that he conspired to import marijuana. According to U.S. indictment documents, Raj has a criminal history for possession of marijuana and immigration violations. As for the tunnel, it will now be destroyed by investigators, who pointed out Thursday how important it was to have stopped the three from being successful. "A tunnel that crosses the border is a significant threat to both U.S. and Canadian national security," said Leigh Winchell, a special agent with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. "The implications are immense," he added. When asked about the men, and the complexity of the tunnel they built, Winchell acknowledged they had done impressive work, but stopped short of giving them their due. "They were smart enough to build a sophisticated tunnel," he said, "but they weren't smart enough not to get caught." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth