News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Smugglers Using Helicopters To Transport Drugs |
Title: | CN BC: Smugglers Using Helicopters To Transport Drugs |
Published On: | 2009-10-12 |
Source: | Calgary Herald (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2009-10-13 09:56:28 |
SMUGGLERS USING HELICOPTERS TO TRANSPORT DRUGS
A $50,000 payday looked easy for 29-year-old Jeremy Snow. With some
helicopter training in his past, the man from Kelowna was recruited to
fly payloads of B. C. marijuana into the U. S. and hook up with a
cocaine connection for the return trip to Canada.
He never got his money.
Shortly after taking off from Kelowna's Okanagan Mountain Helicopters
without a licence, Snow was arrested when he touched down in a forest
landing pad in northern Idaho with 80 kilograms of marijuana on board.
He was sentenced in U. S. District Court in Seattle earlier this month
to just under four years in jail for his part in a cross-border
drug-smuggling ring.
His case highlights a problem that has U. S. authorities
worried.
Emily Langlie, a spokeswoman for the U. S. Attorney's office, says a
report was filed into the case record, detailing the ease with which
B. C. pilots are trained for drug-smuggling runs.
Helicopter flight school operators don't check students' backgrounds,
and criminal record checks are not required for licence approval.
Smuggling by chopper is a "very serious" border-integrity and
public-safety issue, Langlie said. "We've seen a lot of smuggling by
air from Canada into the U. S."
Sometimes the pilot trainees drop out of pilot school once they know
just enough to handle the machine.
Johannes Vates, chief flight instructor at Okanagan Mountain
Helicopters, said Snow raised no suspicions, even when he dropped out
several weeks before completing his four-month basic-training course.
"He was quiet and polite," Vates said.
Authorities allege that 24-year-old Sam Lindsay-Brown, another B. C.
pilot, was involved in the same ring as Snow. He was arrested in
February after landing near Spokane, Wash., with a load of marijuana
and ecstasy, according to police.
Four days later, he hung himself in the Spokane County
jail.
Michael Chettleburgh, an author and expert on drug crime, said
helicopters are increasingly being used for smuggling by gangs that
are flush with cash from a$6-billion to$8-billion annual cash crop of
B. C. bud, which is traded for cocaine, heroin and guns, he said.
"The helicopter is a growing tool for gangs," Chettleburgh
said.
"We're standing there with our pants around our ankles saying, 'We'd
better get some more regulations.' It's organized crime versus
disorganized police and authorities like Transport Canada."
A $50,000 payday looked easy for 29-year-old Jeremy Snow. With some
helicopter training in his past, the man from Kelowna was recruited to
fly payloads of B. C. marijuana into the U. S. and hook up with a
cocaine connection for the return trip to Canada.
He never got his money.
Shortly after taking off from Kelowna's Okanagan Mountain Helicopters
without a licence, Snow was arrested when he touched down in a forest
landing pad in northern Idaho with 80 kilograms of marijuana on board.
He was sentenced in U. S. District Court in Seattle earlier this month
to just under four years in jail for his part in a cross-border
drug-smuggling ring.
His case highlights a problem that has U. S. authorities
worried.
Emily Langlie, a spokeswoman for the U. S. Attorney's office, says a
report was filed into the case record, detailing the ease with which
B. C. pilots are trained for drug-smuggling runs.
Helicopter flight school operators don't check students' backgrounds,
and criminal record checks are not required for licence approval.
Smuggling by chopper is a "very serious" border-integrity and
public-safety issue, Langlie said. "We've seen a lot of smuggling by
air from Canada into the U. S."
Sometimes the pilot trainees drop out of pilot school once they know
just enough to handle the machine.
Johannes Vates, chief flight instructor at Okanagan Mountain
Helicopters, said Snow raised no suspicions, even when he dropped out
several weeks before completing his four-month basic-training course.
"He was quiet and polite," Vates said.
Authorities allege that 24-year-old Sam Lindsay-Brown, another B. C.
pilot, was involved in the same ring as Snow. He was arrested in
February after landing near Spokane, Wash., with a load of marijuana
and ecstasy, according to police.
Four days later, he hung himself in the Spokane County
jail.
Michael Chettleburgh, an author and expert on drug crime, said
helicopters are increasingly being used for smuggling by gangs that
are flush with cash from a$6-billion to$8-billion annual cash crop of
B. C. bud, which is traded for cocaine, heroin and guns, he said.
"The helicopter is a growing tool for gangs," Chettleburgh
said.
"We're standing there with our pants around our ankles saying, 'We'd
better get some more regulations.' It's organized crime versus
disorganized police and authorities like Transport Canada."
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