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Schumer calls for border anti-smuggling strategy
Associated Press
BUFFALO - Sen. Charles Schumer Wednesday said Congress should force the White House to create an anti-drug-smuggling strategy for the northern border, similar to one in place for the southern border.
The New York Democrat cited statistics showing large increases in cocaine, heroin and marijuana seizures along the U.S.-Canadian border since 2007. Most of the club drug Ecstasy sneaked into the United States crosses the northern border.
"Even in the face of increased drug smuggling, the administration lacks a comprehensive strategy to fight this scourge," said Schumer, who said he will seek support for a bill from colleagues in other border states.
Northern border agents who seized a single kilogram of heroin and cocaine in 2007 seized 18 kilograms of cocaine and 28 kilograms of heroin in 2009, U.S. Justice Department statistics show. There were 3,423 kilograms of marijuana confiscated last year, compared with 2,792 kilograms two years earlier.
While those numbers are dwarfed by seizures from the southern border, the reverse is true for Ecstasy seizures. Since 2005, agents have seized eight times the club drug at the northern border than at the southern border, taking 668 pounds from smugglers in 2009, 1,358 pounds in 2008 and 529 pounds in 2007.
In a Feb. 19 Western New York seizure, agents using X-ray technology at the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge found 47 pounds of ecstasy - 77,856 tablets worth $1.5 million - in a car's rear quarter panels, wrapped in cellophane, dryer sheets and electrical tape. A 53-year-old Canadian man was arrested.
Schumer's legislation would mandate that the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy devise and implement a comprehensive counter-narcotics plan for the 4,000-mile border. New York Rep. Bill Owens is expected to sponsor a similar bill in the House.
The National Drug Control Policy office said in a statement it had not seen the proposed legislation but was interested in learning more about it.
Schumer also opposed the Obama administration's plan for a 12 percent funding cut for a federal crime-fighting initiative that has allowed counties with the highest drug activity to beef up staff and productivity. The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Program in New York would lose $1.2 million to $1.5 million in the proposed 2011 budget, he said.
"Narcotics traffickers," said Albany County District Attorney David Soares, "they're not looking at budgets and they're not slashing their budgets."
Soares said federal funding to his county has helped target activity along a section of Interstate 90 that feeds Interstate 87. The area is traveled by traffickers moving drugs between Boston and Buffalo and Canada and New York City.

