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NewsNovember 6, 2001

EL PASO, Texas -- At the Santa Fe International Bridge in El Paso, customs inspectors looking for terrorists are flinging open hoods and trunks, knocking on body panels and getting down on their hands and knees to peek under vehicles. Last week, inspectors dug out nearly 50 packages of pot, weighing a total of 70 pounds, from a false gas tank in a shiny Toyota Tercel...

By Chris Roberts, The Associated Press

EL PASO, Texas -- At the Santa Fe International Bridge in El Paso, customs inspectors looking for terrorists are flinging open hoods and trunks, knocking on body panels and getting down on their hands and knees to peek under vehicles.

Last week, inspectors dug out nearly 50 packages of pot, weighing a total of 70 pounds, from a false gas tank in a shiny Toyota Tercel.

The seizure illustrates what Customs Service and Border Patrol officials are seeing: Drug smugglers are getting back to business -- and drug seizures are up sharply -- after a lull prompted by the stepped-up security along the U.S-Mexican border that followed the terrorist attacks.

Investigators believe smugglers are trying to push more drugs across the border to make up lost profits, and are getting caught by the tighter security.

"They're desperate," said Carlos Quevedo, a spokesman for the Border Patrol's McAllen, Texas, sector. "They don't even care if it's daylight. They just want to get lucky."

Before Sept. 11, most vehicles were waved through border checkpoints. Now, since border officials went to the highest level of alert, nearly every vehicle gets looked over. Inspections include an examination of the trunk and the engine compartment.

Tried to wait it out

In the two weeks immediately following the terrorist attacks, drug seizures along the 1,962-mile U.S.-Mexico border fell 80 percent compared with the same period last year. But the trend has since reversed.

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Drug smugglers "decided to wait it out, hoping it would go back to the way it was, and that hasn't happened," said Vincent Bond, customs spokesman in Southern California. So "they decided to risk the increased scrutiny."

Customs Service seizures of marijuana between Sept. 24 and Oct. 25 are up anywhere from 58 percent along the South Texas border to 394 percent in Arizona. Altogether, more than 32,000 pounds were confiscated in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.

In Southern California, where the records are kept differently, an 11 percent increase in marijuana seizures was recorded in the first 25 days of October. Nearly 31,500 pounds were seized.

The situation is similar at the U.S.-Canadian border, though the seizures are in far smaller quantities, said Dean Boyd, a customs spokesman in Washington. The Canadian border is not as closely guarded as the nation's southern edge.

Smuggling from Canada often involves a potent marijuana referred to as "B.C. bud." Customs officials seized 980 pounds of the pot, worth as much as $8 million, on Oct. 3 in Blaine, Wash., Boyd said.

Marijuana smugglers are in a bind because the end of September marked their harvest and dealers are eager to move old supplies, Boyd said. Increased scrutiny of U.S. airspace means flying drugs into the United States is no longer a good option, he said.

"They owe people and they need to get it to market," Boyd said.

Cocaine is the second most commonly seized drug, though in far less gaudy amounts. For every Southwest border state except Arizona, seizures increased between Sept. 24 and Oct. 25 compared with the same period last year.

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