Pubdate: Mon, 07 May 2001
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: 2001 Southam Inc.
Contact:  http://www.nationalpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
Author: Jim Bronskill

POT SMUGGLERS USE B.C. AS EXPORT HUB

Billion-Dollar Industry: U.S Gangs Net Big Profits From Sales Of 'B.C. Bud'

OTTAWA - Several U.S. marijuana-trafficking syndicates are smuggling 
high-quality British Columbia pot into the United States, where its potency 
draws a much higher price than domestic or Mexican marijuana, a new 
intelligence report reveals.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) report says cannabis 
cultivation in British Columbia has become a billion-dollar industry that 
will encourage expansion of the marijuana trade in North America.

B.C. Bud -- as it is popularly known -- sells for up to US$4,400 per 
kilogram in Vancouver, as much as US$6,600 in the state of Washington and 
US$13,200 in California. In New York City, Canadian marijuana has sold for 
up to US$17,600 per kg.

"DEA officials in Portland, Me., report that high-potency Canadian-grown 
marijuana is sold in the region at up to five times the price of domestic 
and Mexican marijuana," says the report.

A cannabis grower with a 50-plant hydroponic operation who harvests three 
crops of 15% potency a year can make $225,000 after expenses.

The recently released report, by the DEA's intelligence division, was 
completed last December, based in part on information from the RCMP and 
other Canadian authorities.

The analysis provides new insight into the lucrative British Columbia 
marijuana business, including the extent of U.S. involvement in the phenomenon.

Though the term B.C. Bud refers to the bud of the female cannabis plant, 
rich in the psychoactive chemical THC, it has become synonymous with 
high-grade Canadian pot.

Canadian growers employ the most current methods, using high-tech equipment 
to electronically regulate temperature, light and nutrients in hydroponic 
greenhouses.

Marijuana grown under these conditions contains a percentage of THC ranging 
from 15% to as much as 25%, far more than the naturally grown cannabis 
plants of the 1970s.

Authorities estimate there are as many as 3,000 hydroponic greenhouses in 
the Vancouver area, housed largely in rental properties. Indoor cultivation 
has spread to other regions of Canada, including the Prairie provinces, 
Ontario and Quebec, where premier pot is marketed as "Quebec Gold."

In British Columbia, police intelligence indicates Canadian-based outlaw 
motorcycle gangs such as the Hells Angels, Vietnamese gangs, and various 
white and Hispanic groups smuggle marijuana into the United States.

"It is important to note that no one criminal element has a monopoly on the 
marijuana trade," says the DEA report.

"Moreover, DEA reporting suggests that several U.S.-based 
marijuana-trafficking organizations now are using British Columbia as a hub 
of operations and are exploiting the vast United States-Canadian border."

Hells Angels drug-trafficking operations in the United States have 
experienced setbacks, but profits from those based in Canada reportedly are 
being used to "revitalize the gang" in the United States, notes the report.

Across Canada, the number of marijuana plants seized more than tripled to 
954,700 in 1999 from 296,000 in 1995.

Police in B.C. now raid about eight indoor growing operations a day. The 
number of cases jumped 30 per cent to 3,279 in 1999 from 2,351 in 1998.

The U.S. Customs Service reports the amount of marijuana intercepted along 
the B.C.-Washington border increased nine-fold between 1994 and 1999.

The DEA report says although Canada is not yet a primary supplier of 
marijuana to the Americans, "the smuggling of B.C. Bud from British 
Columbia is burgeoning, as are shipments of Quebec Gold to the northeastern 
United States."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens