News
Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 21, 2005
CONTACT: DEA Public Affairs 202-307-7977
'First
Ever' Tunnel Discovered Between Canada and US
Coordinated
Investigation Leads to Arrest of Drug Smugglers
 |
Rodney
G. Benson, Special Agent in Charge, Seattle Field Division
holds one of the shovels used to dig the illegal tunnel.
|
JUL
21--(Seattle,
WA) Three men are under arrest and a lengthy investigation is continuing
into a sophisticated tunnel running from British Columbia, Canada,
into Washington State. The tunnel, located just east of the Lynden/Aldergrove
border crossing, has been under construction for more than a year.
The tunnel is approximately 360 feet long and runs at a depth of
between three and ten feet. It is reinforced with iron rebar and
2x6 wood supports. Both Canadian and American law enforcement have
been monitoring the construction of the tunnel and today shut the
tunnel down after a lengthy investigation into the individuals involved
in building the tunnel, and using it for illegal drug trafficking.
FRANCIS
DEVANDRA RAJ, 30, TIMOTHY WOO, 34, and JOHNATHAN VALENZUELA, 27, all
of Surrey, BC, were charged today in U.S. District Court in Seattle
with Conspiracy to Distribute Marijuana, and Conspiracy to Import Marijuana.
RAJ owns the property on the Canadian side of the border where the
entrance to the tunnel is hidden under a Quonset hut. On the American
side, the tunnel terminates beneath the living room floor of a home
located at 151 East Boundary Road, in Lynden, Washington. Construction
of the tunnel was completed in early July 2005.
 |
The
tunnel, pictured above, is one of only 34 cross-border tunnels
ever discovered in the United States.
|
Using a delayed
notice search warrant, DEA and other federal agents entered the home
July 2, 2005, to examine the tunnel. Shortly thereafter a U.S. District
Judge authorized the installation of cameras and listening devices
in the home to monitor activities in the home. Using these devices,
agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and various other federal, state and
local law enforcement authorities, observed multiple trips by RAJ,
WOO, and VALENZUELA through the tunnel carrying large hockey bags or
garbage bags.
DEA agents were
able to apprehend several loads of marijuana and ecstasy that the conspirators
had tried to move through the tunnel.
Although tunnels
have been found at the southern border of the United States, this is
the first tunnel ever discovered between Canada and the U.S.

US Entrance
|

Reinforced Concrete Entrance
|

Heavy Duty Cart
|

Canada Entrance
|
"This tunnel
seizure, the first of its kind on the United States and Canada border,
is one of only 34 cross-border tunnels ever discovered in the United
States. This unregulated and uncontrolled point of entry could have
constituted a real threat to the United States, not only in terms of
drug trafficking, but to the national security of our nation," stated
Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Seattle
Field Division, Rodney Benson.
"The presence
of a tunnel on our northern border threatens the security of countries,
whether it is used to smuggle drugs, contraband or even terrorists," stated
United States Attorney John McKay. "Shutting it down, just as
it is completed, is a huge blow to these criminals."

Agent inside tunnel. |
"This tunnel
was ambitious, sophisticated and an example of the lengths individuals
and criminal organizations will go to for illegal profits. Thanks to
an intelligence-led investigation and a coordinated approach between
Canadian and U.S. agencies it has been shut down," said Inspector
Pat Fogarty, Officer in Charge of CFSEU-BC Team 3.
Canada's Border
Services Agency became aware of the tunnel construction in February
2005 and alerted the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit (CFSEU-BC).
That unit of the RCMP was launched in April 2004 to fight organized
crime in British Columbia. Canadian and American law enforcement organizations
coordinated their efforts to make sure all activity in the tunnel was
monitored and that prosecutions could proceed on both sides of the
border. The tunnel will now be destroyed so it cannot be used for any
smuggling or other illegal activities.
In addition to
officers and agents from DEA, ICE, CBP, RCMP, and CFSEU-BC, officers
and agents from Canada Border Services Agency, the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (ATF) as well as the Washington
State Patrol and Northwest Drug Task Force participated in the investigation.
The three men arrested
will make their initial appearances in U.S. District Court in Seattle
at 2:30 today.
|