Pubdate: Sun, 20 Aug 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Padraic Murphy DOWN ON THE BORDER ... Organised crime figures have turned parts of the Victorian border with South Australia into a drug bazaar where they trade potent marijuana for harder drugs such as ecstasy and heroin. The booming trade results from liberal laws in South Australia that allow people to grow up to 10 marijuana plants a year, capable of producing up to 13 kilograms of cannabis, for personal use - worth a potential $300,000 a year. Police on both sides of the border blame the lax laws for turning routes between Adelaide and the eastern seaboard into superhighways used for the transport of drugs. The number of plants allowed under the law was briefly reduced to three in April last year, a move welcomed by police. The limit was overturned in March and returned to 10. SA Police Minister Robert Brokenshire says he hopes to have the number reduced to three again by October. The recently retired head of the Victoria Police drug squad, John McKoy, says: "Ten plants is a ridiculously high number to have in any one person's possession. Every criminal in SA has been enlisted to grow the allocated 10 plants by larger syndicates. "Intelligence reports indicate marijuana laws are used by gangs to buy harder drugs in Melbourne and Sydney." Police also fear that bikie gangs have moved in to control the drug routes and that SA crime figures now reap much of the estimated $5billion spent annually by Australians on marijuana. Independent MP Russell Savage, from Mildura, says marijuana traffic to the eastern seaboard from South Australia is regularly intercepted in his electorate. "It is commonly believed that plants grown in South Australia are supplying the drug industry interstate," Mr Savage says. One officer from western Victoria told The Sunday Agethat his station intercepted up to 10 cars a month travelling between SA and Victoria with significant amounts of drugs. "Certainly criminals are running cannabis interstate in exchange for hard drugs," Mr McKoy added. South Australia's law has seen Adelaide dubbed the "Amsterdam of the south". South Australia's Detective Chief Superintendent Denis Edmonds says that the 10-plant law was introduced in 1987 - when growing techniques were less sophisticated - and that significant amounts of SA-grown hydroponic cannabis were now shipped from the state to Victoria and New South Wales. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck