News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Ladner Tug Seized In 'BC Bud' Haul |
Title: | US WA: Ladner Tug Seized In 'BC Bud' Haul |
Published On: | 2002-03-22 |
Source: | South Delta Leader (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 15:10:45 |
LADNER TUG SEIZED IN 'B.C. BUD' HAUL
Four Canadians, including three crew members of tugboat Delta Fox
registered to a South Delta woman, have been arrested in connection with a
US$1.2 million B.C.-grown marijuana haul in the San Juan Islands in
Washington State.
Charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and
importation of marijuana are: Edward Guy Bolderson, 63, captain of the
Delta Fox, Mark Edward Bolderson, 40, Guy Cameron Crawford, 42; and Peter
Francis Mitchell, 34.
According to Transport Canada's vessel registry query system, the tugboat
Delta Fox, formerly known as the Glenayre, is owned by Virginia Jean
Bolderson, listed as a resident of the 4900-block of River Road in Ladner.
Ladner Harbour manager Mike Owen told the Leader the tugboat was last seen
in port without a barge on March 13 and that the owners were chronically
late in paying moorage fees.
"We've got unpaid charges going back as far as 2000," Owen said, "and when
all is said and done, they owe us just over $500."
Owen added the vessel was not a regular user of the harbour, but used to
tie up near the Elliot Street fish sales float when it docked.
The arrests for smuggling were made early last Thursday, March 14, as the
men allegedly tried to unload a barge at a popular pleasure boating station
fronting Cornet Bay -a popular U.S. pleasure boating destination.
As reported in the Leader's sister paper, the Whidbey News-Times,
suspicions were first aroused when staff at nearby Deception Park
questioned why an apparent commercial operation was taking place on
recreational park land at 7 a.m. By 9 a.m., the suspects were in custody as
officers from the Island County Sheriff's Office, State Patrol, U.S.
Customs, and other agencies combed the scene, using a drug-sniffing dog to
inspect the unopened boxes. Police believe the drugs had been stored in the
hold of the small barge, and then allegedly pushed ashore by the tugboat,
Delta Fox.
All four suspects were taken to the Oak Harbor jail that morning and later
appeared in U.S. District Court in Seattle.
State Trooper Scott Wernecke said during the search, a U.S. Customs agent
opened one of the cardboard boxes and identified the contents as 20 to 25
pounds of marijuana believed to be from B.C. A subsequent search of the
container turned up a total of 374 plastic bags of the illegal drug
weighing roughly 446 pounds.
Four Canadians, including three crew members of tugboat Delta Fox
registered to a South Delta woman, have been arrested in connection with a
US$1.2 million B.C.-grown marijuana haul in the San Juan Islands in
Washington State.
Charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and
importation of marijuana are: Edward Guy Bolderson, 63, captain of the
Delta Fox, Mark Edward Bolderson, 40, Guy Cameron Crawford, 42; and Peter
Francis Mitchell, 34.
According to Transport Canada's vessel registry query system, the tugboat
Delta Fox, formerly known as the Glenayre, is owned by Virginia Jean
Bolderson, listed as a resident of the 4900-block of River Road in Ladner.
Ladner Harbour manager Mike Owen told the Leader the tugboat was last seen
in port without a barge on March 13 and that the owners were chronically
late in paying moorage fees.
"We've got unpaid charges going back as far as 2000," Owen said, "and when
all is said and done, they owe us just over $500."
Owen added the vessel was not a regular user of the harbour, but used to
tie up near the Elliot Street fish sales float when it docked.
The arrests for smuggling were made early last Thursday, March 14, as the
men allegedly tried to unload a barge at a popular pleasure boating station
fronting Cornet Bay -a popular U.S. pleasure boating destination.
As reported in the Leader's sister paper, the Whidbey News-Times,
suspicions were first aroused when staff at nearby Deception Park
questioned why an apparent commercial operation was taking place on
recreational park land at 7 a.m. By 9 a.m., the suspects were in custody as
officers from the Island County Sheriff's Office, State Patrol, U.S.
Customs, and other agencies combed the scene, using a drug-sniffing dog to
inspect the unopened boxes. Police believe the drugs had been stored in the
hold of the small barge, and then allegedly pushed ashore by the tugboat,
Delta Fox.
All four suspects were taken to the Oak Harbor jail that morning and later
appeared in U.S. District Court in Seattle.
State Trooper Scott Wernecke said during the search, a U.S. Customs agent
opened one of the cardboard boxes and identified the contents as 20 to 25
pounds of marijuana believed to be from B.C. A subsequent search of the
container turned up a total of 374 plastic bags of the illegal drug
weighing roughly 446 pounds.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...