Pubdate: Sun, 05 Jul 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Andrei Bondoreff, Staff Writer VICTORIA OF THE 1890S WAS A HUB FOR SMUGGLERS In the 1890s. the West Coast was awash with smugglers running Chinese immigrants, opium, cigarettes and liquor over the Canada-U.S. border. According to U.S. officials, Victoria was at the centre of this illicit trade network. On July 3, 1890, the U.S. treasury department sent one of its special agents to Victoria to "get, as nearly as possible, into the inside of the operations of the smuggling ring that is supposed to have headquarters there," the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported. At the time, Victoria was an important source of opium and Chinese immigrants being smuggled into Washington state. Tough laws banned opium in many American jurisdictions and, in those areas where it was legal, high duties made it expensive. Just a short boat ride away in Victoria, however, the drug could be easily purchased in the numerous opium dens in the city's Chinatown district. Here it was legal, plentiful and relatively cheap. Immigrants who lived in Chinatown were attracted to the U.S. by the prospect of earning higher wages. But tough American anti-Asian legislation prevented a legal route across the border, so Chinese immigrants paid white smugglers anywhere from $20 to $25 a head to sneak them across the Strait of Georgia on boats. Flowing north from the U.S. into Canada were cheap cigarettes and alcohol. The liquor trade was particularly lucrative for American smugglers who sold their whiskey to aboriginal communities. In 1876, Canada's federal Indian Act legally defined aboriginal people as minors and prohibited them from buying, selling or consuming alcohol. This led to black market liquor sales on many reserves. American bootleggers eager to earn big profits flooded aboriginal communities along the B.C. coast with cheap, poor-quality liquor, causing all sorts of problems, including an increase in the number of poisonings. The penalties for getting caught smuggling varied. The Daily Colonist reported in May 1891 that the owner of a bootlegging sloop was captured near Chemainus. The owner, whose vessel and cargo were seized, had a choice of either paying a $200 fine or doing six months of hard labour. In June of the same year, a human trafficker was caught in Pedder Bay and was given a $400 fine. On the U.S. side, a man known as the "king of the opium smugglers of the Sound" was ordered to pay a $5,000 fine and serve two years in jail after being found guilty on four counts of opium smuggling. Arresting these maritime outlaws was difficult for law enforcement officials on both sides of the border. The criminals sailed under the cover of night and operated in a smuggler's paradise of isolated channels, hidden coves and secluded bays around Vancouver Island and Puget Sound. A member of the U.S. Revenue Marine Service described to the Daily Colonist how -- even when authorities managed to track down smugglers - -- "the rascals are extremely hard to catch. ... We give them a futile chase but unless the breeze fails them or some accident befalls them, they generally elude us. A swift launch or craft on the order of a torpedo boat is what we need to cope with the[m]." The case of Andrew Holt, one of the most notorious criminals sailing West Coast waters in the late 1880s, illustrates how tough smugglers could be and how well equipped they were. After years of trying to locate him, U.S. agents finally tracked him down in March 1890. But when they went to arrest him, he refused to be taken alive. The authorities shot and killed him. Recognizing the value of using his sloop, which was known for being one of the fastest in Puget Sound, authorities pressed it into service chasing smugglers. Smuggling was a cat and mouse game, one that the U.S. treasury department agent visiting Victoria in June 1890 learned authorities could easily lose. While exploring local waters, the agent claimed to have discovered a smugglers' cove with a large cache of opium destined for the U.S. on a steamer known as the Grace. He and his men followed the ship's movements closely, hoping to catch the ship's crew in the act of smuggling, but the Grace never took the opium. Thinking they had "checkmated the smugglers," the Americans "congratulated themselves" -- until, that is, they went back to the island and noticed that the opium was gone. It had been smuggled away on another ship. Humbled, they were forced to concede that the smugglers "enjoyed the last laugh this time and the checkmating ha[d] been all on their side." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr