Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2008 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Chad Skelton, Canwest News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) B.C. SEEN AS A MAJOR COCAINE SMUGGLING CENTRE Gangs Are Bringing Drug From U.S., Selling It Worldwide: Border Agency (CNS) - B.C. has become a major hub for cocaine smuggling over the past two years, with gangs bringing in the drug from the U.S. for transport across Canada and around the world, a Canada Border Services Agency report says. The October 2007 document, obtained by the Vancouver Sun through the Access to Information Act, said the amount of cocaine seized at land border crossings in B.C. has tripled in recent years -- with no apparent increase in local demand. "There is such a large quantity of cocaine entering British Columbia that it is now being shipped to other countries, in addition to other provinces and territories in Canada," states the report. Most of the cocaine seized at the border in B.C. is found stashed in commercial trucks, often in sophisticated hidden compartments, although the report notes "on occasion the drugs are not concealed at all and are simply sitting inside a cardboard box in the back of the truck." The document, prepared by the border agency's intelligence unit, notes the use of trucks to smuggle cocaine is a major shift from just a few years ago, when Toronto's Pearson Airport was the destination of choice for cocaine smugglers. Border agency spokeswoman Paula Shore said officers seized 570 kilograms of cocaine in the Pacific region last year, compared with just 184 kilograms in 2005. That doesn't include cocaine discovered by the RCMP between ports of entry, or by U.S. authorities on its way to B.C., which the report suggests brings the total amount of B.C.-bound cocaine seized each year to more than a metric tonne. It's not entirely clear what's behind the sudden increase in cocaine imports to B.C. But the report suggests part of the reason lies in the province's booming production of marijuana, crystal meth and ecstasy for the U.S. market. Drug gangs in B.C. increasingly accept payment from U.S. customers in the form of cocaine, which they bring into Canada to sell or export elsewhere. The border agency report notes the increase in cocaine seizures at B.C. land border crossings "has been mirrored by the equally rapid decrease in currency seizures." Over just the past two years, the amount of suspicious cash seized at the border in B.C. has dropped from a monthly average of $481,000 to just $112,000. Supt. Paul Nadeau, director of the RCMP's drug branch in Ottawa, said drug gangs like to barter pot for cocaine because it saves them the trouble of exchanging U.S. dollars into Canadian currency, and is often more profitable in the long run. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom