Pubdate: Mon, July 12, 1999 Source: The Penticton Herald (Canada) Copyright: 1999 - Horizon Operations (B.C.) Ltd. Website: http://www.ok.bc.ca/PH/index.html Letters: Maurice Smith RISE IN SMUGGLING EXPECTED IN INTERIOR Authorities Say Crackdown At Coast Will Push Smugglers Eastward The announcement that U.S. border authorities are stepping up enforcement against smuggling in the Vancouver area is expected to herald another increase in smuggling in the Interior. Doris Meissner, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Services commissioner, has announced plans to install a $4.5-million fibre optic system along the B.C.-Washington border from Blaine east to the Cascade Mountain foothills. She also said seven more agents will be added to the Pacific Highway border crossing to assist in combating drug and people smuggling. Authorities on both sides of the border say the plugging up of gaps in the Fraser Valley is bound to lead to more smuggling in the less intensively patrolled Interior. "It's obvious that the pressure in the Vancouver area is pushing the drug smuggling this way," said Richard Graham, officer in charge of the U.S. Border Patrol's Oroville office. Less than two weeks ago, Graham arrested a Pender Island man just over the border carrying $226,000 worth of marijuana. Though he does not have up-to-date statistics, he said the number of arrests are up dramatically in the past year as pressure has mounted in the Lower Mainland to slow the flow. "We are seeing the increases over here already. A lot of the people we are arresting are from Vancouver or have ties to the Vancouver area." Const. Pete Frizzell of the Border Enforcement Team in Chilliwack, concurred. "(Smugglers moving eastward) seems to be a trend in the last eight or 10 months with the increase in enforcement down here, as well as the publicity. I think what we are doing down here is effecting what is happening up there. It has forced some of the smuggling to the Interior part of the province." Since the Border Enforcement Team was started two years ago, it has chalked up an increasing number of busts. Frizzell said the unit is averaging $1 million a month worth of drug seizures. There is now talk, he said, of expanding the unit eastward along the un-defended border. Still, he said agents are getting just the tip of the iceberg as demand for the increasingly popular "B.C. bud" intensifies. "I have heard we are only getting 10 per cent of the traffic," he said. He notes B.C.-grown marijuana sold here for $2,000 can fetch $6,000 US in California. John Manderson of the RCMP customs and excise unit in Kelowna said smugglers have used everything from dirt bikes to horses to boats on Osoyoos Lake as well as simply driving or walking across the Interior border. He said Canadian agencies work closely with those across the border, who have significantly more resources to deal with smuggling. "We are getting more people this way," he said. "Most of the activity is going south." Graham said he has asked for increased manpower as cross border traffic increases, though no announcement has been made. "The more men I can put on the border, the more people I can catch," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea