HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html
Pubdate: Mon, 26 Jul 2004 Source: Delta Optimist (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.delta-optimist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1265 Author: Maureen Gulyas BOMB THREAT ON FERRY GOES UP IN SMOKE UPON INVESTIGATION What was thought to be a bomb threat on a ferry sailing out of Tsawwassen Thursday morning was really just a case of two guys trying to find a private place to smoke a joint. Two American tourists on the 11 a.m. sailing of the Spirit of British Columbia told a crew member they observed two men greet each other by shaking hands. One of the tourists then thought she heard one of the men say "blow up the boat," confirmed Sidney RCMP Cpl. Nedge Drgastin. The pair slipped into a crew-only area. The tourists snapped a photo of one of the men, and then reported the incident to a B.C. Ferries crew member. From there, the RCMP and FBI were notified. On the other side of water, Sidney RCMP officers gathered at the Swartz Bay terminal. "We didn't know at that point whether they were foot passengers or in a vehicle or anything else, but in fact the two males were located," Drgastin said. The two men were cooperative. "They explained that they had one joint and that they didn't want to smoke it in front of other people, so they went into an area that said crew only and smoked their joint in private."The pair told police they never said anything about blowing up the boat. "The closest someone could have taken what they were saying was, 'let's do up a doobie,'" Drgastin explained. The men offered their bags for police to search. There were no other drugs found. Drgastin said the RCMP checked their passports, did a search on the national intelligence data base, but nothing come up. "They appeared forthright," she said. Even though this incident was not what it appeared, Drgastin said it's good members of the public are aware of what's going on around them. "It's better to report a concern than to let it go unchecked," she said. The men were later released. B.C. Ferries spokesperson Debra Marshall confirmed the police incident on the Spirit of British Columbia, but deferred further comment to the RCMP. In January of last year, an American intelligence report, the Combined Analysis of Potential Foreign Strike Zones, listed 22 potential terrorist targets in Canada. The Tsawwassen ferry terminal was eighth on the list. The terminal was used by convicted al Qaida terrorist Ahmed Ressam. He caught a ferry on Dec. 13, 1999 from Tsawwassen carrying a homemade bomb in the trunk of his rented vehicle. The bomb was intended for Los Angeles International Airport, but Ressam was stopped by a U.S. border guard at Port Angeles before he was able to enter the country. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D