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One admitted smuggler, Steven Sarti, described to a U.S. judge in May how he and an 18-man crew stuffed high-potency marijuana into black duffel bags used for hockey gear, then coded the bags with numbers representing different buyers. The gang smuggled 2,000 pounds of marijuana a week. There have been no confirmed cases of terrorists coming through the reservation, but U.S. officials say they're worried it could happen. "The folks we're dealing with, both in drug trafficking and terrorist activities, are not stupid," said James Burns, who directs Drug Enforcement Administration operations along the New York-Canada border. "We don't want to have anybody exploit a weak point." Elsewhere on the border, tighter security around official border crossings is driving smugglers deeper into the wilderness. In Sanilac County, Mich., Sheriff Garry Biniecki said his county's coastline on Lake Huron was a quiet place until 2008, when the government began installing sensors and cameras along the St. Clair River, to the south. Soon residents in his territory were reporting inflatable boats lurking offshore at night, strange goings-on at public boat ramps, and suspicious cars on deserted roads. "Because so much pressure has been put down there, they're coming north," Biniecki said. Still, many residents doubt whether the threat is real and chafe at border security measures.
In Waddington, N.Y., 20 miles west of Massena on the St. Lawrence River, visitors used to boat over from Canada to shop at the IGA or sip a beer at one of the four bars near the waterfront, said resident Herb Champion. "Their Thanksgiving is Columbus Day, so they would come over here to buy their turkeys because it was cheaper," said Champion, 63. The trips were technically illegal, but no one cared, he said. But in recent years federal agents have been stopping boats and even coming into bars to check IDs, he said. Three of the bars have closed for lack of customers. "This used to be the greatest unsecured border in the world," Champion said. "Now everything's dried up." Canadians, too, are worried about the "thickening" of the border, said Mark Salter, an expert on national security at the University of Ottawa. Drug seizures and crime along the U.S.-Canadian border are nothing compared to what's smuggled across the southern border, he said. Canada's stronger economy and smaller population
-- about 33 million compared to 147 million in Mexico and Central America -- also means there is less illegal immigration. "There is simply not the scale of threat to the United States from Canada as there is from the southern border," Salter said. About 7,500 pounds of marijuana coming from Canada were seized in 2009, compared to 3.2 million pounds seized on the southern border. However, agents seized six times as much Ecstasy on the northern border as on the southern border in 2009, the Justice Department said. Marijuana seizures have doubled since 2007 in the Border Patrol's Swanton, Vt., sector, which covers northern New York, Border Patrol officials say. And the marijuana that Canada produces is much more potent than most Mexican varieties and sells for triple the price. Opposition politicians in Canada have accused Harper, the prime minister, of buying into U.S. paranoia with the new border security agreement. Fortunately for the United States, Canada has done a pretty good job of patrolling its own coastlines and identifying terrorist threats, said Michael O'Hanlon, a security expert at the Brookings Institution think-tank in Washington. In the end, he said, the United States will probably have to live with much of its northern border unpatrolled. "It's true, we're a little less rigorous" up north, O'Hanlon said. "But I'm not persuaded it's realistic to cover all of it."
[Associated
Press;
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