Pubdate: Fri, 03 May 2002 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Peter Cameron / Canadian Press POLICE TARGET HOME MARIJUANA GROWS Many Caught In Crackdown Are In The GTA Police across the country swooped down on home growers of marijuana last month in a 15-day blitz that left 255 people facing drug charges. Between April 15 and 30, 208 search warrants were executed from coast to coast and 369 drug charges were laid, police said Thursday. Operation Greensweep 2, the second national blitz in three months, was co-ordinated by the Ontario Provincial Police Drug Enforcement Section. In Ontario alone, 122 search warrants were executed and 125 people were charged with a total of 234 drug offences. The majority of the Ontario raids were in areas surrounding Toronto. British Columbia had the next highest number of raids at 49, with 39 of them in the Vancouver area. Police in Alberta (14 raids), Saskatchewan (two raids), Manitoba (two raids), Quebec (17 raids) and Nova Scotia (two raids) also participated in the crackdown on the home-grows. There had been a "huge increase in the number of these grows reported and detected during the past 18 to 22 months," police said in a release. The majority of the grow operations were located in residential areas and posed a fire and safety hazard in the way they were constructed, police said. Each operation had the potential to produce approximately 1,600 plants a year and generate $1.6 million in profit, the release said. In grow operations where the growing time has been accelerated and where the residence has been altered to accommodate more marijuana, one indoor hydroponic grow operation can produce much more than that, police said. "These operations are a threat to our community and we are looking to our citizens for assistance," said Det. Supt. Jim Hutchinson, an Ontario Provincial Police spokesman. "We know of many other grow operations and drug forces across the country are working their way through the list." In addition to more than 60,000 marijuana plants, police also seized other drugs, money and weapons. A dozen gold bars were found in one of the Ontario raids, police said. Some of the homes were protected by video surveillance and in others officers faced fortifications and booby traps. In January, about 500 officers from more than 20 agencies raided home-grow operations across Canada. Nearly 140 arrests were made. Police estimate that one in 10 indoor marijuana grows will go up in flames. Diversion of electricity and tampering with electrical wiring are the main causes of the fires. The indoor hydroponic marijuana operations require massive amounts of water and hydro. It is estimated that each indoor hydroponic marijuana grow operation uses approximately $700 to $1,000 per month in hydro that is not paid for by the user. Police said the resulting overloading of the power system can also cause hydro transformers to blow, resulting in power outages in entire neighbourhoods. Police also warn of increased violence in areas where indoor grows are operating. In British Columbia, one in eight homicides is related to the marijuana grow industry, police said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom