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INSIDE
Feds
crack human smuggling ring in Blaine
By
Tara Nelson
Fourteen
U.S. and Canadian residents, including at least one Washington
state resident, have been indicted for their alleged involvement
in a human smuggling operation that illegally brought as many
as 60 individuals into the United States over the past year.
At
a press conference at the Peace Arch State Park Thursday,
April 13 representatives from four bi-national agencies – the
U.S. Attorney’s office in Seattle, U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
(RCMP), and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) – announced
of those 14 individuals, 12 have been arrested and two others
are still being sought, officials said.
Investigators
believe Kavel Multani, a dual Canadian and Indian citizen,
oversaw the Vancouver-based smuggling ring along with three
other suspects, Nizar Sabaz-Ali, 38, Sandip Parhar, 26, and
Armardeep Sing Powar, 23, all Canadian citizens. Multani is
charged with nine counts of smuggling and transporting people
illegally into the United States and Canada. All of the individuals
are believed to be of Pakistani and Indian descent.
Leigh Winchell,
special agent of ICE’s Seattle office,
said individuals paid – and, in some cases, borrowed – as
much as $35,000 a person to be transported to Canada through
commercial aircraft into the Toronto area using fraudulent
passports.
Once there,
they were flown to Vancouver, B.C., and then transported by
vehicle to various points along the Washington border. Once
in the United States, most of the individuals were believed
to have moved to the Seattle area and other large, urban areas.
The passports were then retrieved and sent back to India and
Pakistan to be reused.
Winchell said there was no indication the individuals
involved in the operation have ties to terrorism.
“Most
of the people coming here are just wanting a better way of
life or to reunite with their families,” he said,
adding that human smuggling is a $10 billion a year
business. “Some
of them even borrowed the money to get here.”
When
asked by reporters why the leaders of the operation
chose this particular location, Douglas Whalley, an assistant
to the U.S. Attorney’s office in Seattle, said he thinks it was
a matter of geography, rather than border security.
“I
don’t think it’s a weak border crossing,” he
said. “I think it’s a busy border crossing.
It may be perceived as easier because of that.”
Authorities
became aware of the operation in January, 2005,
when border patrol agents in Oroville received
a tip about three men who had purchased maps
of the border and inquired about border patrol enforcement
there. Several days later, CBP agents intercepted
a minivan carrying 10 individuals who entered
the country illegally.
Bud Mercer,
chief superintendent of the criminal operations division of
the RCMP, said while both U.S. and Canadian authorities were
aware of the human smuggling for some time, officials waited
almost one year until they felt it was most effective
time to act.
“Throughout the investigation, there were
a number of instances in which we could have made our move,” Mercer
said. “In
each case, the approach was measured based
on the outcome, what we felt we could achieve, and what the
jeopardy there would be to the entire operation.”
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