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Pubdate: Sun, 24 Jul 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Ethan Baron, The Province DRUG TUNNEL - SOURCES SAYS CONDUIT NOT JUST FOR POT Plans For Ecstasy As Well Three Surrey men who allegedly spent more than a year digging a drug tunnel under the border to the U.S. planned to use it for smuggling ecstacy as well as marijuana, American authorities say. Francis Raj, 30, Timothy Woo, 34, and Jonathan Valenzuela, 27, were charged Thursday in U.S. court with conspiracy to smuggle and distribute marijuana, an offence carrying a minimum 10-year prison sentence. The trio dug the 110-metre passageway with hand shovels while under constant surveillance, and smuggled to the U.S. two shipments of Vancouver-produced pot, totalling 90 kilograms, allege authorities, who intercepted the shipments in Washington. Ecstacy-smuggling information came from an undercover operation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement this spring, targeting a Canadian man believed to have smuggled ecstacy into the U.S. The man told the undercover agent the tunnelers would use their secret conduit for transportation of pot and ecstacy, the complaint says. It says he also told the agent that they planned to charge drug traffickers $500 a pound, and that they could run loads of 300 pounds at a time. The tunnel was a stone's throw from the Aldergrove border station. The location was "advantageous," because border patrols expect to find smugglers in more secluded areas, said Organized Crime Agency of B.C. Insp. Pat Fogarty. The tunnel ran between a Quonset hut on property bought by Raj in Aldergrove in March 2004 and an unoccupied two-storey house in Lynden, Wash., owned by a couple now subject to a criminal investigation. Whatcom County records identify the property's owners as Raman and Kusum Patel. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek