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BORDER GUARD BUSTED

A customs officer is behind bars after being caught with thousands of dollars worth of pot at the Pacific Hwy.  border crossing.

A Canada Customs officer caught smuggling marijuana across the Pacific Hwy.  border crossing said an Indo-Canadian gang forced him to do it.

Altaf Merali, a 37-year-old Surrey resident, was arrested at the Surrey/Blaine border crossing on Tuesday with more than 90 kilograms of marijuana, worth an estimated $680,000 U.S.

He had pulled up at the crossing in a 1992 GMC Safari, with his uniform hanging in the rear window, and flashed his Canada Customs badge when he approached the inspection booth.

However, a random computer selection picked Merali's van for a secondary exam.  Merali filled in a written baggage declaration, then asked to speak to an officer in private, and confession to having the pot.

He claimed he had been approached last November by a neighbour and a man named Sam who wanted him to smuggle dope south and coke north across the border.

Merali claimed Tuesday's run was the first time he brought marijuana across the border.

He is charged under U.S.  federal law with conspiracy to distribute marijuana.  If convicted, he faces a mandatory minimum prison term of five years behind bars, with a maximum of 40 years and a $2 million fine.

Merali made his first appearance before a U.S.  magistrate judge in Seattle on Wednesday, and will remain in jail pending the results of a bail hearing, scheduled for Monday, May 9.