Pubdate: Wed, 10 Aug 2011
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: 2011 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU
Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
Author: Tristin Hopper

PUTTING SMUGGLERS ON THE RUN AT PEARSON

Every week brings a new crop of contraband items passing through the 
gates of Toronto's Pearson International Airport. "Last week we caught 
a guy hiding a snake under his shirt," said a superintendent with the 
airport branch of the Canada Border Services Agency. Rounding up 
smugglers is key to the Conservative government's plans for a "North 
American perimeter," so the feds are on a campaign to ramp up border 
security to U.S. levels and, in the words of Public Safety Minister 
Vic Toews, "convince the Americans that our country is a safe country."

On Tuesday morning, Mr. Toews, along with at least a dozen reporters, 
dropped by Pearson for a demonstration. The Post's Tristin Hopper went 
to watch:

10: 14 The demonstration starts with Scout the food-sniffer dog, a 
two-yearold beagle whose inherent cuteness is enhanced all the more by 
his tiny CBSA vest. Led by border services officer Ed Filman, Scout 
begins sniffing his way through a row of about 30 suitcases laid out 
on the airport floor. Five suitcases in, Scout sits down. Unzipping 
the bag in front of Scout, Mr. Filman pulls out an apple. Scout then 
pegs another suitcase containing a hunk of garlic sausage. So the dog 
can smell food. But Scout's real talent is selective sniffing - he is 
able to ignore non-restricted food items such as chocolate bars and 
potato chips, and zero in instead on meat, vegetables and potted 
plants. Being cute, it turns out, is also an important part of the 
job. "We want the dog to be able to come up to people in a calm, 
gentle way," a border official tells Mr. Toews.

10: 16 His suitcase inspection complete, Scout poses for photos next 
to a plastic table piled high with his take from last week: succulent 
Austrian prosciutto, mouth-watering bratwurst, high-end Japanese fish 
cakes and two large bonsai trees. They look harmless, says P.J. Joura, 
superintendent of the detector dog program, but all it takes is one 
contaminated sausage or houseplant to cause millions of dollars damage 
to the Canadian economy.

10: 20 Five "travellers" (really border service agents in civilian 
clothes) line up in single file in front of news cameras. Misha, a 
stout black Labrador, waddles onto the scene to find any hidden drugs. 
Glancing around nervously, the dog is led repeatedly around the 
passengers. Once. Twice. Three times. If this was real life, the 
smuggler would already be on his way to sell hits at the nearest 
playground. "She looks pretty distracted," says Mr. Toews. "She's new 
to the airport environment, so she's still a bit crowd shy and camera 
shy," explains a border agent. Hemmed in by longhaired news 
photographers, it is also possible that Misha is simply overcome by 
residual odours.

10: 24 On to the ion scanner, a magical machine that can find 
microscopic residues of everything from narcotics to explosives. Mr. 
Toews hands a border official a $20 bill and asks him to give it a 
quick test. A few minutes later, the machine beeps. "It's showing 
cocaine," says the officer. Virtually every $20 bill in Canada has at 
least one-or two-billionths of a gram of cocaine, and the Public 
Safety Minister's money is no exception.

10: 45 Epilogue. Before a row of TV cameras and microphones, Mr. Toews 
praises the work of Pearson's border officials and sniffer dogs. "If 
we want to continue to be a co-operating partner in international 
trade and tourism, we will need certain standards in place," he says. 
Of course, "there is absolutely no way that everybody can be checked," he says.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.