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Feds shut down cross-border drug tunnel

Federal agents have shut down an elaborate, 360-foot drug-smuggling tunnel dug underneath the U.S.-Canadian border — the first such passageway discovered along the nation’s northern edge, officials said Thursday.
Handout photo shows tunnel dug by drug traffickers under US-Canada border in Aldergrove, British Columbia
A photo released by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency on Thursday shows the tunnel dug by alleged drug traffickers across the U.S.-Canada border in Aldergrove, British Columbia. US DEA via Reuters
/ Source: The Associated Press

Federal agents have shut down an elaborate, 360-foot drug-smuggling tunnel dug underneath the U.S.-Canadian border — the first such passageway discovered along the nation’s northern edge, officials said Thursday.

Five people were arrested on marijuana trafficking charges, U.S. Attorney John McKay said in this border town about 90 miles north of Seattle.

The tunnel ran from a quonset hut on the Canadian side and ended under the living room of a home on the U.S. side, 300 feet from the border. Built with lumber, concrete and metal reinforcing bars, it was equipped with lights and ventilation, and ran underneath a highway.

The passageway was 3½ to 4 feet high and wide, and ran anywhere from 3 to 10 feet below ground, authorities said.

“They were smart enough to build a sophisticated tunnel. They weren’t smart enough to not get caught,” McKay said.

Authorities monitored construction
McKay said authorities had been monitoring construction of the tunnel for six months and sealed it shortly after it opened Wednesday.

Canadian official points to drawing showing design of tunnel dug underneath US-Canada border during news conference in Aldergrove
Inspector Pat Fogerty of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit (CFSEU) points to a drawing showing the design of a tunnel built by drug traffickers underneath the U.S.-Canada border, during a news conference in Aldergrove, British Columbia July 21, 2005. Three people have been arrested after police raided a sophisticated tunnel intended to smuggle drugs under the U.S.-Canada border between Vancouver and Seattle, police said on Thursday. The smugglers spent more than a year building the 360-foot (110-metre) long tunnel that ran from a Quonset hut-style storage building on a property near Aldergrove, British Columbia to the living room of a home in Lyndon, Washington, investigators said. REUTERS/Andy ClarkAndy Clark / X00056

Although numerous smuggling tunnels have been found on the U.S.-Mexican border, this was the first discovered along the border with Canada, McKay said. Canadian authorities learned of the tunnel in February and alerted U.S. officials.

Francis Devandra Raj, 30; Timothy Woo, 34; and Johnathan Valenzuela, 27, of Surrey, British Columbia, were arrested Wednesday. They were charged with conspiracy to import and distribute marijuana. Raj owns the property under the quonset hut, authorities said.

Earlier arrests
On July 16, two other people were arrested separately in Washington state for transporting marijuana that had come through the tunnel, said Greg Gassett, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent.

One was a woman who authorities said had 93 pounds of marijuana in her vehicle when she was stopped. The other was a man pulled over with 110 pounds of the drug.

On July 2, agents entered the home on the U.S. side to examine the tunnel. They later installed cameras and listening devices in the home.