Pubdate: Sat, 22 Aug 2015 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/letters Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Emanuela Campanella Page: D2 COCAINE IS KING IN BORDER DRUG SMUGGLING Poking deep into the U.S., and laced to it by six bridges, Southwestern Ontario's charmed geography for trade makes it a smuggler's alley for cocaine, more than two metric tonnes of which were seized at its borders between 2007 - 2013. How much more gets in, is anyone's guess. Emanuela Campanella reports. On the police blotters of Southwestern Ontario cities - the records of arrests made and charges laid - there's no question which illegal drug commands the most time and attention. It's marijuana, with arrests made and charges laid at rates that dwarf those for all other drugs. But don't be fooled: a fine white powder can be found on those same police blotters. It's cocaine - and not just because that drug runs a distant second to pot in the region's reported drug violations. With some of North America's busiest border crossings, and geography that pokes finger-like deep into the densely populated U.S. mid-Atlantic and Midwest states, Southwestern Ontario is a major cocaine corridor to Canada, a smuggler's alley for vast amounts of the drug that blow through the region to markets in the nation's heartland, often on a route that begins thousands of kilometres away in Mexico. Snow, dust, nose candy - the drug with many nicknames moves up the area's Highway 401 spine to the rest of Canada, following the same routes that make Southwestern Ontario a major gateway for legal trade. "A lot of the drugs - particularly when we are referring to cocaine coming through the border - do not remain in Southwestern Ontario, it transits to other major urban centres," said Staff Sgt. Peter Koersvelt of the RCMP in Windsor. Three weeks ago in Windsor, on Koersvelt's turf, the busiest Canada-U.S. border crossing, a 26-year-old Scarborough trucker was charged after officials found 52 bricks of cocaine stuffed into three duffel bags and a tote in a storage area of the truck. But that seizure - 52 kilograms - is just the tip of the cocaine iceberg, an analysis of drug seizures at Southwestern Ontario's border crossing reveals. While police-reported drug crimes in Windsor and London run more than four times higher for pot than for cocaine, according to Statistics Canada figures, down along the region's U.S. borders - from its remote southwestern tip in Windsor, to the Niagara Peninsula - cocaine dominates the illegal drug mountain. An analysis of seven years of federal port-of-entry data, obtained under a freedom of information request, shows Canadian border guards seized cocaine worth $207 million on the street at the region's six international bridges from 2007 to 2013, making it by far and away the top drug smuggled in. While the figures don't include the weight of cocaine seized, it amounts to about 2,000 kilograms - that's two metric tonnes - if you work it out backward from its street value of about $100 a gram. That's enough cocaine to fill 5,000 cereal boxes - what Koersvelt calls "a significant volume." By comparison, marijuana seizures at the same Southwestern Ontario bridges - Windsor's Ambassador Bridge, the Sarnia-area Blue Water Bridge and the Niagara region's four bridges to New York state - raked in only $8 million in pot over the same seven-year period. Another 250 kilograms of cocaine - a stimulant that's commonly snorted, inhaled or injected - has been seized since May 2014 at all entry points to Southwestern Ontario, including airports, authorities report. Any way you cut it, cocaine is the go-to drug for smugglers working through the region. Transport trucks - and thousands cross some of the region's international spans daily, especially the Ambassador Bridge between Windsor and Detroit - are the vehicle of choice for drug runners. "These are criminal organizations that co-ordinate the importation of drugs in this volume," Koersvelt said. "I have probably been personally involved in about 15 major interdictions here since 2009 - every one of those involved a commercial truck." The busy Ambassador - its daily truck traffic averages 7,000 or more - is the most vulnerable to smuggling on sheer traffic volume alone, said Koersvelt. "That (trucking) industry would be very vulnerable to being used to smuggle anything, drugs or any sort of contraband into the border and into Canada, because so many trucks come and go," he said. "There's definitely a lot more (cocaine) that gets through undetected." Once it makes it into Southwestern Ontario, with its easy access to Toronto and densely populated southern Ontario, cocaine - and other drugs - can quickly be moved across the country. Organized crime is inevitably involved, said Western University criminologist Michael Arntfield. "London has always been coveted territory for organized crime groups," said the former London police officer. "It's in part why it would be a soughtafter destination and distribution point for traffickers. It's a jump-off point to huge markets." Besides its lucrative value, cocaine is also easily divisible, another potential draw for smugglers, said Paul Whitehead, another criminologist at Western University. "The amount of space required to try (to) hide the substance is relatively small," he said, noting it can easily be hidden in clandestine places fashioned in cars and trucks. Drug-sniffing dogs and X-ray devices are among the weapons used at the border to intercept the illegal flow of cocaine into the country. But for all the cocaine being stopped by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) in Southwestern Ontario, how much gets in undetected is anyone's guess. The president of the union representing border officers says plenty makes it over the border. Budget cuts several years ago have strained the agency's resources, leaving it with fewer agents and sniffer dogs in Southwestern Ontario, said Pierre Fortin. * [sidebar] BY THE NUMBERS Southwestern Ontario border seizures, 2007-2013 $207 million: Street value of cocaine seized $27 million: Value of vehicles and trailers seized $7 million: Cash from suspected crimes seized $8 million: Street value of marijuana seized - --- --- --- SMUGGLER'S ALLEY BRIDGES Where the Southwestern Ontario seizures took place: Ambassador Bridge, Windsor Blue Water Bridge, Point Edward Niagara Peninsula: Lewiston-Queenston Bridge Whirlpool Bridge Rainbow Bridge Peace Bridge - --- --- --- ONE BRIDGE, MANY BUSTS Major cocaine seizures on the Canadian side of the Blue Water Bridge near Sarnia 2015: Authorities seize 31 bricks of cocaine, totalling 34 kilograms, from the flatbed undercarriage of a truck entering the country April 4. A 32-year-old Quebec trucker is charged. The seizure boosts to 196 kilos the total amount of cocaine intercepted by border service officers in Sarnia in the previous year. 2014: 39 kilograms of cocaine found in a commercial vehicle intercepted on inspection in November. Two Quebec residents charged. More than 123 kilograms of suspected cocaine, worth an estimated $12.3 million, found in a wall panel of a pickup truck's cargo bed, divided into 105 packages. Two men from Stoney Creek, Ont., charged. 2010: Two Toronto-area men charged after 47 kilograms of cocaine, worth nearly $6 million, seized in February from a transport truck carrying medical supplies. 2009: 50 kilograms of cocaine, worth as much as $6.25 million, found hidden in a tractor-trailer loaded with electronics. A 26-year-old Brampton man is charged. 2008: 230 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of $28.7 million found in the cab of a transport truck in February, in the largest border-crossing drug seizure in Canadian history to that point. DRUG VIOLATIONS While cocaine dominates drug smuggling into Southwestern Ontario, largely destined for markets elsewhere, it accounts for relatively far fewer violations of drug laws within the region than does marijuana, or cannabis. A breakdown of police-reported drug violations per 100,000 people: London: Cannabis, 150; cocaine, 34; methamphetamines, 22; other, 63 Kitchener-Waterloo: Cannabis, 225; cocaine, 33; methamphetamines, 8; other, 50 Hamilton: Cannabis, 225; cocaine, 33; methamphetamines, 1; other, 34 Windsor: Cannabis, 116; cocaine, 27; methamphetamines, 3; other, 39 St. Catharines-Niagara: Cannabis, 119; cocaine, 33; methamphetamines, 4; other, 19 - --- --- --- ELSEWHERE IN ONTARIO Toronto: Cannabis, 129; cocaine, 36; methamphetamines, 2; other, 24 Kingston: Cannabis, 82; cocaine, 33; methamphetamines, 21; other, 34 * Source: Statistics Canada, 2013 - --- --- --- WHAT OTHERS HAVE SAID "This illegal drug trade brings violence and other associated crimes into our communities and neighbourhoods." - - RCMP Cpl. Randy Schertzer, Sarnia, 2015 Cocaine is an insidious drug that leaves community disaster in its wake. - - Superior Court Justice John Desotti, Sarnia, as he sentenced a trucker last year who brought a kilogram of cocaine into Canada to three years in prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt