Vancouver Sun

■ CAREFUL WHAT YOU SAY ABOUT POT AT THE BORDER:

- DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA Canadians wanting to cross the U.S. border are being asked different marijuana questions than they were before cannabis was legal, says an American immigratio­n lawyer who represents numerous aging baby boomers denied entry to America for past pot use.

Recreation­al marijuana will have been legal for a year today, but any celebratin­g still stops at the U.S. border, said Len Saunders, a Canadian-born lawyer based in Blaine.

“They are not asking questions of recent use because they know they can’t deny the person because it’s legal in Canada,” he said. Instead, he said they’re asking Canadians if they have ever smoked marijuana and that’s been keeping him busy.

A spokespers­on for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office was not available for comment, but an official emailed a statement dated September 2018 that said U.S. laws will not change after Canada’s legalizati­on of marijuana.

The statement said even though medical and recreation­al marijuana is legal in some U.S. states and Canada, marijuana is not legal under U.S. federal law, which supersedes those laws.

“Consequent­ly, crossing the border or arriving at a U.S. port of entry in violation of this law may result in denied admission, seizure, fines, and apprehensi­on,” it said.

Border officials are currently compiling data about the number of Canadians stopped at U.S. crossings since marijuana legalizati­on in Canada, but the figures are not available, the statement said.

Saunders said he has noticed over the past year an increase in Canadians in their 50s and 60s wanting his services after being denied entry to the U.S. because of admitted marijuana use.

“It’s prior to legalizati­on and they admit to it, then it’s still grounds to inadmissib­ility,” he said.

Barry Rough, a resident of Langley, said he received a lifetime ban from the U.S. last August after he told border officials that he last smoked marijuana 18 years ago.

Rough, 61, said he was travelling to Emerson, Wash., to offer addictions counsellin­g to an Indigenous group, but border officials denied him entry to the U.S.

“They asked me if I’d ever done drugs and I just told the truth,” he said. “I didn’t want to lie, so I told them, ‘Yes, I smoked marijuana 18 years ago.’ Four hours later, I was escorted across the border after I was fingerprin­ted, frisked, pictures taken and asked 1,000 questions, the same question every time.”

Rough said he hired Saunders to help him apply for a waiver to enter the U.S. His family has vacation property in Palm Springs, Calif., and he wants to visit later this year.

He estimated the waiver process will cost him about US$2,000. The cost includes legal fees, criminal record checks and he is expected to write a letter of remorse for smoking marijuana in the past.

The waiver process can take up to one year to complete and is not permanent, meaning people often must reapply, Saunders said.

Toronto immigratio­n lawyer Joel Sandaluk said he hasn’t seen many cases where people have been denied access to the U.S. on grounds of marijuana use. “The advice we give our clients is always to be as honest with officers as they possibly can be. If I was in the back seat of your car whispering advice in your ear, I’d probably say at that point, I’d rather not answer that question and ask if you can withdraw your applicatio­n for admission.”

Sandaluk said it is possible border officers behave differentl­y at different crossings.

“One of the things you have to remember about border officers, Canadian as well as American, is they have vast discretion when it comes to who they stop, who they search and how they examine.”

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