Cocaine seizures at Canada's borders spike as pandemic wanes
Cocaine seizures at Canada’s borders rose sharply when restrictions loosened, according to new figures released by the Canadian Border Services Agency, with experts saying it’s a sign that drug traffickers are getting back to business as the pandemic wanes.
Facing a downturn in regular trade, drug trafficking networks turned to couriers which were more likely to be caught at ports of entry, Mount Royal University’s Kelly Sundberg told CTV News Toronto in an interview.
“It was much more difficult for drug dealers to smuggle during [the pandemic],” Sundberg said. “They changed their operation to couriers. It makes sense we’re seeing more seizures at airports and cargo with couriers.”
In the fiscal year ending in 2018, CBSA agents seized 2,860 kg of cocaine, including coca leaves, coca paste, crack cocaine, and cocaine residue, according to figures provided by the agency.
By the fiscal year ending in 2021 — the year that corresponded to the onset of the pandemic — that had nosedived to 1,214 kg of cocaine.
Source: CBSA
The next year, propelled in part by one 1.5-ton seizure in the port of St. John, CBSA cocaine seizures rose to 2,875 kg.
And the following year stayed high, at 1,812 kg — about 50 per cent more than pandemic lows.
A Windsor, Ont. judge weighed in on a CBSA seizure in a decision released this month, finding Federico Jimenez-Martinez guilty of possession for the 18 bricks of cocaine found in his vehicle’s spare tire, worth as much as $2 million.
He admitted having the cocaine in August 2021, but said he had only intended to drive from Arizona to Michigan, U.S., and went over the Ambassador Bridge into Ontario by accident, court documents show.
Prosecutors admitted they couldn’t prove he intended to cross the border, and withdrew an additional trafficking charge.
Jimenez-Martinez claimed that he was under duress, facing threats by cartel members in Mexico if he didn’t deliver.
Justice K.W. Munroe found his brother did receive threats — but it was much more likely that was the cartel looking to enforce a drug debt created when those bricks didn’t arrive at their destination.
A still image from CBSA surveillance video obtained from Ontario Superior Court shows Federico Jimenez-Martinez being led away as his vehicle is searched by border guards.
As seized amounts rise, it’s likely that the amount of cocaine being smuggled in undetected is also increasing, Sundberg said, pointing to figures that show Canadians’ per capita use of cocaine is quite high, and the country has negligible cocaine production.
“Last year, New Zealand seized more cocaine than Canada. A tiny little island in the Pacific. So 3,000 kg sounds like a lot, but it’s to me an indicator that we really need to do a lot more with respect to border security, and we’re not,” he said.
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