Drug seizures along Canadian border up 1,000%, CBP says

Nearly 40,000 pounds of marijuana have been seized by the government.

By Luke Barr
September 16, 2020, 1:33 PM

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Wednesday it has seen a 1,000% spike in drugs seized along the northern border this year.

The agency seized nearly 40,000 pounds of marijuana across 16 ports of entry worth between $100 million and $120 million, according to Aaron Bowker, supervisory CBP officer and public affairs liaison.


In 2019, the ports of entry in the Buffalo division had 1,017 seizures totaling more than 3,440 pounds of narcotics. This year, the Buffalo division had the largest number of seizures on the northern border, followed by the Detroit division.

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Kevin Kelly, the special agent in charge of the Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Buffalo field office, told ABC News that the uptick is due in part to the legalization of marijuana in Canada this year.

HSI is the investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security.


"Since March 16, we've seen a huge uptick in marijuana seizures at the ports of entry," Kelly said.


There is a lot of money to be made on the black market and, according to Kelly, there are multiple actors carrying out the smuggling.


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"What you're seeing is traditional organized crime, Asian organized crime, East Indian organized crime, outlaw motorcycle gangs -- all having a piece or a stock in this sophisticated coordination of getting marijuana into the U.S.," Kelly explained. "It's well structured, it's well choreographed, it's a business model."

Kelly said the groups smuggling drugs into the U.S. through Canada are more "symbiotic" versus the cartels along the southern border fighting for territory.

The Buffalo CBP office said it has seized over 260 pounds of counterfeit prescription drugs such as Xanax. CBP officials worry that Americans may accidentally buy and ingest these fake pills, leading to serious harm.


"It's a large concern and to see the brazen attempts of the amount that [criminals] try and send in, when they do send it, it just means [criminals] will not stop doing it," Bowker explained.


Kelly said officials are starting to see an alarming trend in how these counterfeit drugs are made.


"They're supplementing the binder, which is the product that holds it together, with fentanyl and other byproducts," he said.


Bowker said there has been an uptick in gun seizures along the border too.


"We definitely have seen an increase in weapons, some of them are personal weapons," Bowker said.

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/drug...ry?id=73049477