US, Canadian Cops Uncover Major Criminal Scheme During Border Operation

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Desertdog

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Secure the border, NOW.


http://www.sierratimes.com/06/06/30/64_12_117_8_51733.htm
US, Canadian Cops Uncover Major Criminal Scheme During Border Operation
Jim Kouri

Calling it one of the most brazen criminal schemes ever uncovered along the US-Canada border, authorities from the two countries on Thursday unveiled the results of a multi-agency operation targeting a network of smuggling organizations that used aircraft to ferry tons of drugs across the border, dropping many of the loads in broad daylight at remote wooded locations in the State of Washington and Canada's British Columbia.
At a news conference on Thursday morning, Homeland Security Assistant Secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement Julie Myers, US Attorney John McKay, and Royal Canadian Mounted Police Chief Superintendent Bud Mercer outlined details of a nearly two-year ICE-led enforcement effort called Operation Frozen Timber.

ICE and the RCMP worked closely with federal, state and local agencies from both nations on the Operation. Since the investigation began in November 2004, the United States Attorneys' Offices in Seattle and Spokane have issued 45 indictments in connection with the case, resulting in more than 40 arrests so far. In Canada, the RCMP has made six related arrests.

In total, U.S. and Canadian authorities have seized roughly 8,000 pounds of marijuana, 800 pounds of cocaine, three aircraft, and $1.5 million in U.S. currency.

“These organized criminal groups are motivated by one thing: greed,” said John McKay, US Attorney for the Western District of Washington.

“With Operation Frozen Timber, we not only cut into their profits with countless seizures of drugs and money, we demonstrated that there is a high price to pay. Drug ring leader Robert Kesling now knows that high price -- he is doing 17 years in federal prison.”

Authorities say the British Columbia-based smuggling organizations targeted in Operation Frozen Timber used helicopters and planes to transport drugs to pre-arranged drop sites on public lands throughout the region, including locations in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie and Okanogan National Forests, and North Cascades National Park.

The network smuggled high-grade Canadian grown marijuana into the United States and cocaine into Canada. At Thursday's news conference, authorities played dramatic surveillance footage taken during the investigation which featured several clips showing how the drug traffickers operated.

“The criminals involved in this scheme literally took cross-border smuggling to new heights,” said ICE Assistant Secretary Myers.

“This sophisticated illegal operation underscores the importance of addressing border security comprehensively. We must look not only at the borders themselves, but also at the interior, and at the modes and methods used by criminals who attempt to do us harm.”

During the course of Operation Frozen Timber, U.S. and Canadian enforcement teams intercepted more than 17 drug loads, including one shipment in February 2005 involving five suitcases packed with 149 kilograms of cocaine that constituted the largest single cocaine seizure in the state of Washington last year.

Authorities say the defendants planned to use a helicopter to smuggle the cocaine from a landing site in the Okanogan National Forest to British Columbia. Another significant seizure in the case came in September 2005, when agents followed two courier vehicles to a residence and recovered more than 1,100 pounds of marijuana.

“Operation Frozen Timber is a great example of an integrated and coordinated international law enforcement effort,” said CBP Assistant Commissioner Michael C. Kostelnik.

“Both CBP and RCMP air assets played a critical role in supporting this investigation and provided us an opportunity to introduce new technologies and tactics.”

The most recent interdiction occurred early last month after CBP air assets, acting on a tip from the RCMP, tracked a Bell Jet Ranger helicopter to a landing site in a state wildlife area in Okanogan County. After watching the cargo being transferred to a waiting pick up truck, ICE agents, along with officers from the U.S. Forest Service and the Okanogan Drug Task Force, stopped the vehicle, arresting the two men inside and recovering 329 pounds of marijuana.

When the helicopter arrived back in British Columbia, the RCMP arrested the two Canadian pilots, Daryl Desjardins, 45, and Dustin Haugen, 24. Desjardins and Haugen are presently charged in Canada with Import/Export of a Controlled Substance, Trafficking in a Controlled Substance, and Possession of Firearms Contrary to Order.

Intelligence gathered during Operation Frozen Timber revealed there were several independent aerial smuggling cells that essentially subcontracted their services to other criminal organizations seeking to ferry drugs between the two countries. Investigators believe a number of the defendants in the case provided smuggling services to multiple criminal organizations.

“Make no mistake; these criminal organizations pose a threat to our safe homes and communities. Pilots were flying unsafe aircraft often at dangerously low altitudes,” stated RCMP Chief Superintendent Mercer.

“The violent nature of the organized crime groups and the high powered weapons they were in possession of posed a direct threat to the citizens of Canada and the United States,” he added.

Authorities say the public safety concerns associated with the smuggling scheme extend beyond the implications for border security. Several of the Canadian pilots linked to the plot were not licensed to fly in the United States or Canada.

In the last 13 months, at least two helicopters allegedly linked to the network have crashed, resulting in three deaths. In March 2005, one of the pilots arrested in connection with Operation Frozen Timber, Dustin Haugen, was involved in the crash of a Canadian registered helicopter at a residence in Abbotsford, British Columbia, killing a woman at the scene. In September 2005, Canadian Ove Jensen and Richard Long were killed when a Bell Jet Ranger helicopter crashed in Hope, British Columbia after returning from a suspected smuggling flight to the United States.

_________

Jim Kouri, CPP is currently fifth vice-president of the National Association of Chiefs of Police and he's a staff writer for the New Media Alliance (thenma.org). He's former chief at a New York City housing project in Washington Heights nicknamed "Crack City" by reporters covering the drug war in the 1980s. In addition, he served as director of public safety at a New Jersey university and director of security for several major organizations. He's also served on the National Drug Task Force and trained police and security officers throughout the country.
 
“These organized criminal groups are motivated by one thing: greed,” said John McKay, US Attorney for the Western District of Washington.
And the high profits in the drug trade are guaranteed by the prohibition thereof ... :rolleyes:

So how is free trade between the two countries harming me? Shouldn't the drug trade be protected by NAFTA? :p
 
“These organized criminal groups are motivated by one thing: greed,” said John McKay, US Attorney for the Western District of Washington.

They are motivated by consumer demand. De-criminalize these drugs, and the criminals will be put out of business.
JT
 
I don't think closing the border would help with this and when you say close the border what exactly do you mean?

There is a lot of inter country commerce that happens between Washington State and Canada going both directions and a big part of that is tourism not just trade related items or business.

Legalizing some drugs might be an answer but where do you draw the line. Another problem is the regulation, won't someone be willing to pay more for a seemingly more potent form? Won't the drug dealers cut the cost below the store bought price because the mark up is so inflated and still make money?

Uninhabited, unaccesible portions of all border states are in essence wide open for anything. Until we adopt a shoot first, capital punishment prone ideology the consequences of getting caught are worth the reward.
 
Polishrifleman:

Uninhabited, unaccesible portions of all border states are in essence wide open for anything. Until we adopt a shoot first, capital punishment prone ideology the consequences of getting caught are worth the reward.

OIC, people shoud be shot for crossing an arbitrary line with an herb...
 
Not my thought or intention, the point I am trying to make is that problem with most crimes is that the risk reward factor is often greatly skewed in favor of the reward. To the cartels for drugs, the employers for immigration, when one illegal participant goes down 15 more are in line to step up so there is no risk for them.
 
Won't the drug dealers cut the cost below the store bought price because the mark up is so inflated and still make money?
You mean like the moonshiners compete with the liqour companies...? :rolleyes:

Secure the border in such a way that to cross the border people and vehicles have to go through a check point.
Sure, just put up a force field to stop airplanes and helicopters... :rolleyes:
 
No, not a force field - howzabout, oh, I dunno...RADAR??

Forget coke and weed. If we can't control our borders and coastlines, Al Qaeda is sure to smuggle in a nuke or 3 someday. I for one do *not* think we should simply resign ourselves to it.

We've gotten away with the luxury of open borders for 230 years, but we can't afford it anymore. Yes, tightening our borders and coasts will cost us - but not doing it will cost us a whole lot more. If that means we have to cut gov't spending elsewhere, so be it.


I do agree that decriminalization is the only way to go, especially with pot.
 
Secure the border in such a way that to cross the border people and vehicles have to go through a check point.
Evidentally you've never seen the US/Canadian border. It isn't like a courthouse square that you can fence off. There are thousands of miles of remote, rugged wilderness.

I don't quite understand how a fence would stop helicopters, unless it's a real high fence
 
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