Pubdate: Sat, 05 Mar 2005
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2005 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Sarah Kershaw
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?188 (Outlaw Bikers)

VIOLENT NEW FRONT IN DRUG WAR OPENS ON THE CANADIAN BORDER

SEATTLE - The drugs move across the Canadian border inside huge 
tractor-trailer rigs, pounds and pounds stashed in drums of frozen 
raspberries, tucked in shipments of crushed glass, wood chips and sawdust, 
or crammed into hollowed-out logs, in secret compartments that agents refer 
to as "coffins."

Kayakers paddle them south from British Columbia across the freezing bays 
of America's northwest corner, and well-paid couriers carry up to 100 
pounds at a time in makeshift backpacks, hiking eight hours over the rugged 
mountainous terrain that forms part of the border between the United States 
and Canada. Small planes drop them onto raspberry fields and dairy farms in 
hockey bags equipped with avalanche beacons to alert traffickers that the 
drugs have landed.

The contraband is called B.C. bud, a highly potent form of marijuana named 
for the Canadian province where it is grown, and it has become the center 
of what law enforcement officials say is an increasingly violent $7 billion 
cultivation and smuggling industry.

On Thursday, four officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were shot 
to death in Alberta, British Columbia's neighboring province, as they were 
searching a marijuana-growing operation, one of many on the rise there. The 
killings stunned a country that has apparently not lost that many officers 
at once since the mid-19th century.

Leigh H. Winchell, special agent in charge for U.S. Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement in Seattle, which investigates border crimes and is part of the 
Department of Homeland Security, said the police killings in Alberta were 
stark evidence of "how serious the B.C. bud issue is getting, how much 
money is involved and the lengths to which these criminals are willing to 
go to protect it."

He added, "It's getting worse and worse, and we need to address it at every 
level. The funding needs to be there, and the resolve of law enforcement to 
address it needs to be there - on both sides of the border. It's a very 
dark day for all of us."

This new wave of drug trafficking, with Northwest Washington and Seattle a 
major transit point, comes as an enormous challenge to United States law 
enforcement agents stationed along the often invisible northern border. 
They are already dealing with the threat of terrorism, the flow of 
immigrants and new human smuggling operations - some run by some of the 
Canadian criminal organizations that move the marijuana south and cash, 
cocaine and guns north, American and Canadian law enforcement officials say.

The situation is also spotlighting sharp differences in the way the two 
countries deal with drug crimes, with some officials and experts on both 
sides of the border saying Canada's less stringent drug laws have made it 
harder to stem the flow of contraband moving north and south.

In British Columbia, a once-quiet province in a country that has long 
enjoyed a low crime rate, the murder rate has soared in the past two years, 
Canadian officials say, because of killings linked to warring drug gangs.

Now law enforcement officials here fear the violence will migrate south. 
Mr. Winchell likened Seattle, with its currently low crime rate, to "Miami 
before the drug wars" because of what he said was an impending threat of 
drug-related violence. Vast amounts of drugs and money are now flowing 
through Seattle and other West Coast cities, he said, along the heavily 
traveled Interstate 5 corridor from California to the Canadian border. In 
many cases, law enforcement officials from both countries say, traffickers 
are smuggling cocaine north from California to Canada in exchange for B.C. bud.

Inspector Paul Nadeau of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who runs the 
Coordinated Marijuana Enforcement Team in British Columbia, estimated that 
in his province alone, 3.7 million pounds of B.C. bud is produced annually, 
in up to 20,000 marijuana-growing operations, with as much as 50 percent of 
it smuggled into the United States at points as far east as Michigan.

Efforts to combat the flow can be seen vividly in places like Blaine, 
Wash., a tiny border town along the shore in the northwestern part of the 
state, where agents patrol the waters, mountains and airways in brand-new 
boats and planes. Since the Sept. 11 attacks, agents have seen their 
manpower and technological resources double or triple, helping them seize 
growing amounts of B.C. bud. Along the Washington border alone, agents 
seized 20,500 pounds in 2004, worth more than $60 million, up from 4,000 
pounds in 1998.

But with possibly more than 1.5 million pounds coming south, according to 
the Canadian estimates, many acknowledge they are making a mere dent in 
what is coming across.

B.C. bud is grown in indoor nurseries stocked with sophisticated lighting 
and ventilation equipment. Growers use a system known as hydroponic 
cultivation and carefully control the temperature, lighting and nutrients 
in a way that allows a succession of crops to be grown throughout the year. 
The process yields a drug that is far more potent than marijuana coming in 
from Mexico and other countries, giving B.C. bud an almost mythic 
reputation on the street.

Wholesale, B.C. bud sells for about $3,000 a pound, though the price rises 
the farther from Seattle it is sold - $3,500 a pound by the time it reaches 
California. Marijuana smuggled across the southern border sells for $400 to 
$1,000 a pound in the Southwest United States, according to the Drug 
Enforcement Administration.

In the past year, agents in and around Blaine have also begun to seize an 
increasing amount of Ecstasy and chemicals used to make methamphetamine 
headed for the United States. As the agents in the Blaine area have caught 
on to the imaginative ways that smugglers sneak their contraband through, 
more drugs are being transported farther east along the border - which, 
including Alaska, stretches more than 5,000 miles - to places in Idaho, 
Montana and North Dakota, law enforcement agents say. This has prompted 
lawmakers from many of the northern border states to complain that the 
Canadian border is receiving less attention than the Mexican border.

"I think the southern border just has the attention of the media, and with 
the northern border, people just assume it is far more secure than it is," 
said Senator Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington, who, among others, is 
lobbying the Bush administration for more agents on the Canadian border.

The drug-trafficking situation is also one more potential strain on the 
already tense relationship between the United States and Canada, its top 
trading partner, experts say. Canada, which is debating decriminalizing 
personal marijuana use but is also considering stiffer penalties for 
marijuana growers, tends to mete out much lighter sentences than the United 
States courts for drug-related offenses, a situation that has American law 
enforcement officials - and even Canada's own police force - increasingly 
frustrated.

Officials on both sides of the border say that because Canada has tended 
not to pursue growers aggressively, it is difficult to move up the chain 
and crack down on the larger criminal organizations controlling the 
large-scale drug trafficking, although Canadian prosecutors said they have 
recently been arresting and building more cases against the higher-level 
criminals.

"The U.S. takes a sterner attitude on these things - more of a prohibition 
mode," said Christopher Sands, an expert on Canada at the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. "Our philosophies 
are out of whack, and this increased flow is freaking out the Americans 
while the Canadians are more blase."

That could well change after Thursday's killings, said several officials, 
including Inspector Nadeau.

Inspector Nadeau, who said he was deeply frustrated by his own country's 
greater tolerance of drug crimes, said he thought the deaths on Thursday 
were already sending an alarm throughout the country.

"Because of a tragedy we may actually see people try and address the issue 
in an effective manner," Inspector Nadeau said.

Inspector Nadeau said he was irked by what he cited as low rates of 
arrested marijuana growers serving jail time. He said in 2004, only 8 
percent of growers arrested were ordered to jail, down from 19 percent in 
1997. He was citing a statistics gathered by the Canadian police, he said.

"The courts are lackadaisical," he said. "I think we've created a 
generation of homegrown criminal organizations involved in this activity. 
They see themselves as untouchable."

But Robert Prior, director of the Canadian Department of Justice's federal 
prosecution service for the British Columbia Region, said the courts were 
taking the marijuana problem seriously and that prosecutors were 
aggressively pursuing the larger organizations smuggling both B.C. bud 
south and cocaine and guns into Canada. Still, he acknowledged there were 
fundamental differences between judicial systems in the United States and 
Canada.

"Canada just has a different philosophical view to the use of jail than the 
United States," Mr. Prior said. "The only offense we are completely agreed 
on is murder. Otherwise, it's very different."

The major criminal organizations moving the drugs and guns, law enforcement 
officials say, are outlaw motorcycle gangs, particularly the Hells Angels, 
who have denied involvement but who law enforcement officials say do 
everything from growing to smuggling the drugs. Vietnamese and other Asian 
groups tend to specialize in growing, and Indo-Canadians have a niche is 
transporting the drugs, according to Mr. Winchell, of the United States 
Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Agency, and Inspector Nadeau.

Canadians caught smuggling drugs into the United States, many of them mules 
for the major Canadian criminal organizations, are prosecuted and serve 
their sentences here. But typically after a year they can request a return 
to Canada, and if the request is granted, they may end up serving a much 
lighter sentence because of the differences in the two countries' drug 
penalties, said prosecutors on both sides of the border. United States 
agents have complained that they see some of the same Canadian smugglers 
soon after they were returned to Canada to face reduced sentences.

Meanwhile, in and around Blaine, Border Patrol and other law enforcement 
agents are using every tool they have, including motion detectors, giant 
X-ray machines and cameras placed around easily crossed and unmanned border 
entries. The 32 cameras in the Blaine area, beaming into a control room at 
Border Patrol headquarters in Blaine, alerted technicians to a kayaker 
attempting to smuggle 104 pounds of B.C. bud in late January.

It is, as the agents in Blaine describe it, a constant game of cat and 
mouse with the smugglers, who have lately taken to using BlackBerries and 
cellphone text messaging to transmit information about drops and pickups. 
It is a constant race to stay one step ahead, said Joseph W. Giuliano, 
deputy chief patrol agent for the Blaine sector of the United States Border 
Patrol.

"Both of our jobs - the good guys and the bad - is to stay one step ahead 
of the curve," Mr. Giuliano said. "Just as we're doing our darndest to hold 
that position, they're doing their best to reacquire it."