FEDS WORRY OVER POT LAW

T

The420Guy

Guest
WASHINGTON - U.S. officials, already concerned about illegal drugs
coming across the Canadian border, are warning that a Canadian plan to
decriminalize marijuana use could lead to more inspections and long
border delays.

"We don't want the northern border to be a trafficking route for
drugs," said Asa Hutchinson, undersecretary for border and
transportation security for the Department of Homeland Security.

Hutchinson and other U.S. officials say the Canadian proposal is
especially troublesome, considering how drug seizures along the vast
northern border soared following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
- - in part because of heightened security. The amount of marijuana
seized from Canada quadrupled in the year after the attacks.

Seizures have subsided slightly since but remain well above historic
levels.

If Canada approves a plan to decriminalize marijuana for personal use,
U.S. officials fear, drug smuggling could spike, further burdening the
justice system and hindering trade. More vehicles may be stopped and
searched at checkpoints along the 4,000-mile border, slowing movement
of the $1 billion worth of goods traded between the two countries each
day.

"If the perception is that it's easier to get marijuana in, then some
border officials' antennas will be up," said Paul Cellucci, U.S.
ambassador to Canada.

Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien's administration introduced
legislation in late May that would essentially make the penalty for
possession of small amounts of marijuana equivalent to a traffic
ticket. The bill would boost penalties for growing and trafficking
marijuana.

The Canadian proposal "is amazing to us," said Dave McEachran,
prosecuting attorney in Whatcom County, along the Washington state
border. McEachran's office prosecutes hundreds of federal drug cases a
year resulting from arrests at the Blaine, Wash., border - the busiest
crossing west of Detroit.

Canada has long had tolerant drug policing. British Columbia alone is
home to a $4 billion industry in marijuana that is more potent than
Mexican marijuana. Problems with smuggling over the U.S. border have
existed for years.

Canadian officials call U.S. concerns understandable but say the two
nations have a long history of cooperation.

That cooperation is especially close on law enforcement, said Paul
Kennedy, senior assistant deputy solicitor general for Canada. There
is smuggling going both ways, Kennedy noted. While marijuana enters
the United States, cocaine and guns tend to travel north.

While the decriminalization plan has set off alarms, the flow of
marijuana from Canada pales in comparison to the amount grown in the
United States or imported from other countries such as Mexico and
Colombia. In the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, some 20,213 pounds
of marijuana were seized along the northern border, compared with more
than 1.2 million pounds along the southwest border, customs figures
show.


Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jun 2003
Source: Tallahassee Democrat (FL)
Copyright: 2003 Tallahassee Democrat.
Contact: tdedit@taldem.com
Website: https://www.tallahassee.com/mld/democrat/
 
Back
Top Bottom