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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Ashcroft - Agents Heading to Canada
Title:Canada: Ashcroft - Agents Heading to Canada
Published On:2001-06-20
Source:Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA)
Fetched On:2008-09-01 04:25:24
ASHCROFT: AGENTS HEADING TO CANADA

OTTAWA -- U.S. law enforcement agencies are placing agents and other
officials in Canada to fight drug smuggling and other crimes that
cross the border, Attorney General John Ashcroft said Wednesday.

Addressing the Cross-Border Crime Forum, a gathering of top law
enforcement officials from both countries, Ashcroft cited
U.S.-purchased weapons used in Canadian crime and the shipment from
Canada of legally available chemicals for making drugs such as
Ecstasy as major challenges along the 3,000-mile border.

"The increasing volume of law enforcement contact between our two
countries has led to calls in recent years for U.S. officers to be
posted in western Canada," Ashcroft said.

A legal attache from the Justice Department is now based in
Vancouver, British Columbia, he said, and the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration plans to station an agent there. The U.S. Marshals
Service also intends to open a Canadian office, he said.

Canada's law enforcement network came under U.S. criticism after the
December 1999 arrest of Ahmed Ressam by U.S. border officials at Port
Angeles, Washington.

Ressam, an Algerian national under a deportation order in Canada, was
trying to enter the United States with bomb-making materials in the
trunk of his car. He was convicted of terrorism charges this year and
faces sentencing next month.

Emphasizing the cordial nature of the meeting, Ashcroft praised his
Canadian counterpart, Solicitor General Lawrence MacAulay, and the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police for their assistance in bringing Ressam
to justice.

"As a practical matter, neither of us can do the work of justice on
our border alone," he said. "This is why this forum is such a
valuable tool."

Ashcroft cited plans to bolster border law enforcement, including a
new Integrated Border Enforcement Team, known as I-BETS, to operate
on the Akwesasne Indian reservation near Massena, N.Y., and Cornwall,
Ont., a known hotspot for smuggling.

An initial I-BETS team deployed for 15 days along a 150-mile stretch
in 1997 made 32 arrests and seized drugs, weapons and other
contraband worth almost $1 million U.S., he said.

U.S. agencies including the Border Patrol, Immigration and
Naturalization Service, Customs Service, and New York police would
join Canadian police and local agencies on the new I-BETS unit,
Ashcroft said.

He praised a new Canadian law on combatting organized crime, saying
it would expand the use of undercover sting operations across the
border.

"In the United States, we have found this type of undercover
operation to be extremely effective ... " Ashcroft said. "Its
application can have real benefits in efforts to combat
alien-smuggling and other areas of organized crime."
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