Pubdate: Sun, 11 Oct 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Sam Cooper, The Province DRUG SMUGGLERS TAKE TO AIR Helicopters Becoming Craft Of Choice For Cross-border Gangs A $50,000 payday looked easy for 29-year-old Jeremy Snow of Kelowna. With a little helicopter training, he says, he was recruited to fly B.C. bud into the U.S. and hook up with a cocaine connection for the return trip to Canada. He never got his money. Shortly after taking off from Kelowna's Okanagan Mountain Helicopters without a licence, Snow was arrested when he touched down in a forest in northern Idaho with 80 kilograms of marijuana. He was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Seattle earlier this month to just under four years in jail for his part in a cross-border drug-smuggling ring. Emily Langlie, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's office, told The Province a report was filed into the case record detailing the ease with which B.C. pilots are trained for drug-smuggling runs. Helicopter flight-school operators don't check students' backgrounds, and criminal-record checks aren't required for licence approval. Smuggling by chopper is a "very serious" border-integrity and public-safety issue, Langlie said. Sometimes the pilot trainees drop out of school once they know just enough to handle the machines. Johannes Vates, chief flight instructor at Okanagan Mountain Helicopters, said Snow raised no suspicions, even when he dropped out several weeks before completing his four-month, basic-training course. Sam Lindsay-Brown, 24, another B.C. pilot, was allegedly involved in the same ring as Snow. He was arrested in February after landing near Spokane with a load of marijuana and ecstasy. Four days later he hung himself in the Spokane County jail. Lindsay-Brown started training at Chinook Helicopters in Abbotsford in December 2007. Like Vates, Chinook Helicopters owner Cathy Press says little can be done to check on students. An employee of the school, who asked not to be named, said: "Sam was super. None of the other students could believe he was involved in smuggling." Michael Chettleburgh, an author and expert on drug crime, told The Province choppers are increasingly being used for smuggling by gangs that are flush with cash from a $6-billion-to-$8-billion annual cash crop of B.C. bud, which is traded for cocaine, heroin and guns. "The helicopter is a growing tool for gangs," Chettleburgh said. "We're standing there with our pants around our ankles saying, 'We'd better get some more regulations.' It's organized crime versus disorganized police and authorities like Transport Canada." There is a strong appetite for B.C. bud in the U.S., said RCMP Cpl. Richard De Jong, adding grow-ops "continue to be the No. 1 source of income for organized crime" in B.C. Chettleburgh said crime groups see the border as "very porous" and only lose about two per cent of total narcotic shipments to enforcement. He noted crime groups are also increasingly accessing northern B.C. communities by chopper, and trying to cultivate more domestic customers outside the Lower Mainland. The employee said students, mostly males aged 20 to 30, are warned not to get sucked into the "easy money" of drug-smuggling schemes. Nevertheless, muscular, tattooed students who might appear to come from the drug culture are not turned away, she said. The employee said it's well known in the flight-school community that the eldest of the notorious Bacon gang brothers, Jonathan, was trained at B.C. Helicopters in Langley. An employee at B.C. Helicopters, who asked not to be named citing security concerns, told The Province that Jonathan Bacon enrolled before new owner Mischa Gelb took over several years ago. Bacon wasn't up for the serious study involved, and quickly dropped out, the employee said. "There has been a thing with shady characters that come through and don't last," he said. Even when staff have strong suspicions in such cases, "with rights and privacy laws, it's hard to do a background check," the employee said. "We have a joke about 'my-rich-uncle' students. A 20-year-old drives up in the [Cadillac] Escalade and comes through the door and pays cash. Can we deny them? There's no laws and rules in place." Asked what officials are doing about it, Rod Nelson of Transport Canada said: "Transport Canada works with the RCMP when it suspects that aircraft are being used in criminal activities . . . if any violations are found, we can order immediate corrective action or take appropriate punitive actions." But he conceded: "Having a clean criminal record is not a requirement for obtaining a pilot's licence." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D