Alaskan authorities intercept Canadians allegedly carrying drugs, firearms into U.S. by boat

The Porcupine River between Old Crow, Yukon, and the U.S. border. Alaskan officials say they intercepted a boat carrying drugs and firearms that was headed from Old Crow to Fort Yukon, Alaska. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC - image credit)
The Porcupine River between Old Crow, Yukon, and the U.S. border. Alaskan officials say they intercepted a boat carrying drugs and firearms that was headed from Old Crow to Fort Yukon, Alaska. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC - image credit)

Alaskan officials say they are investigating after four Canadians crossed illegally into the United States with narcotics, wild game and firearms.

Alaska State Troopers learned on May 31 that an alleged drug dealer implicated in an overdose in Old Crow, Yukon, was headed to Fort Yukon, Alaska, by boat, according to a news release issued by the Alaska Department of Public Safety.

A village public safety officer (VPSO) in Fort Yukon contacted the boat while state troopers applied for a search warrant for the boat and its passengers, officials said in the release.

The individuals on board were all Canadian citizens, aged 41, 50, 27 and 24, they said.

Officers say they also found drug paraphernalia, three dead black ducks, a small quantity of narcotics and two firearms with assorted ammunition.

Officers investigating possible human smuggling

They believe one of the passengers disposed of suspected narcotics in the river prior to their encounter with the officers, they added.

Officials seized the boat and stored it in Fort Yukon until the Fairbanks Rural Unit and Areawide Narcotics Team could search it.

They interviewed the passengers and discovered that two of them had illegally transported the dead ducks into the U.S.

Two passengers were also illegal aliens in possession of firearms.

Several federal and state authorities, including Alaska Wildlife Troopers, Homeland Security Investigations, and Fairbanks Areawide Narcotics Team (FANT), are all investigating the passengers on multiple different charges, according to the news release, including human smuggling.