Pubdate: Fri, 14 Sep 2007 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: David Carrigg and Phil Couvrette, CanWest News Service U.S. COAST GUARD OPERATING ON CANADIAN SIDE OF STRAIT VANCOUVER -- U.S. Coast Guard vessels can now pursue smugglers fleeing into the Canadian side of the Juan de Fuca Strait. Under a pilot project dubbed Project Shiprider, RCMP officers are onboard two U.S. Coast Guard vessels while U.S. authorities are onboard two RCMP vessels. The project, the first time there's been a strategic use of Canadian and U.S. officers to combat organized crime, was also recently introduced to a 100-kilometre stretch of the St. Lawrence Seaway. The unique cross-border policing deal "gives us the ability to cross over in each others waters and perform ship boardings," said U.S. Coast Guard spokesman Shaun Eggart yesterday. "Usually if a coast guard vessel takes up a chase, it ends when the boat is in Canadian waters," said RCMP spokesman Supt. Bill Ard. Now, the Canadian on board the U.S. vessel can make the arrest in Canadian waters. The U.S. officer on board the Canadian boat has the same powers as an RCMP officer, Ard said. Giving a foreign police force powers in Canada isn't an unprecedented development as secret service agents are given those privileges when the U.S. president visits, such as during the recent summit in Montebello, Que. But this is the first long-term partnership. The West Coast operation is based out of Bellingham and Port Angeles, and was designed to deal with the threat of terrorism and a rise in water-based smuggling of drugs and cash. It started in early August and expires at the end of this month -- although it might be extended. Officers from both forces are trained in the legal aspects of arrest in the U.S. and Canada. Ard said there are eight RCMP and 10 U.S. Coast Guard officers involved in the project. Mike Milne, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman, said water-based smugglers plying the Juan de Fuca Strait are using everything from kayaks to jet boats. "We see B.C. bud coming down into the U.S. and money being smuggled in both directions," said Milne, adding ecstasy is also being smuggled from the Lower Mainland by water into the U.S. No public announcement was made about the pilot project because authorities wanted to keep an element of surprise in their border strategy, but people have spotted U.S. officers in Canadian waters, forcing authorities to reveal some of the project's details. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake