Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jan 2003 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Mike Howell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DRUG COP SAYS FIGHTING MARIJUANA BATTLE FUTILE Unless it's prepared to bolster police resources, the federal government should consider legalizing and regulating the sale of marijuana, says the sergeant in charge of a Vancouver police drug squad. Sgt. Rollie Woods, a 29-year veteran of policing, said with only six full-time officers dedicated to busting marijuana grow-ops in the city, the illegal industry will never be curtailed. "You might as well look at trying to take out the profit by legalizing and regulating it and giving people that want it what they want, and perhaps using the tax revenue to benefit all of society," said Woods, who estimates the city is home to up to 10,000 grow-ops. When police do bust operators of grow-ops, he said, growers often end up facing a fine or a conditional sentence. Many times, police then catch the convicted grower starting up another operation. Pointing to the United States' so-called War on Drugs, he noted that even the combined power of the military, Coast Guard, the Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms unit and thousands of cops is having little effect on the drug problem. Despite its harsher penalties for drug operators, Woods said the U.S. continues to be a thriving market for all types of drugs, including B.C. marijuana, which sells for $6,000 US a pound in Los Angeles and other parts of California. In Vancouver, marijuana sells for about $2,500 a pound. Last year alone, Vancouver police busted about 475 grow-ops and seized enough marijuana-$97 million worth-to put a decent bid on the bankrupt Ottawa Senators hockey team. Two years ago, police busted about 650 grow-ops. Woods believes last year's decrease can be attributed mainly to the aggressive work of GrowBusters, the six-member police team responsible for ridding neighbourhoods of the indoor bud farms. However, Woods acknowledges police have simply pushed the problem into the suburbs and Fraser Valley, where the Organized Crime Association has discovered Vancouver residents growing marijuana in barns and bunkers. Almost two years ago, police had a list of about 700 known grow-ops in the city. They have since cut that list to about 30, but that doesn't mean there are fewer operations, he said. Growers are simply getting more sophisticated at concealing their operations-using better ventilation and filtration systems to mask the skunky smell of the weed and building false fronts in windows to give the appearance the house is being lived in. "I definitely think the growers are keeping their heads down and if you talk to community police stations, they seem to be getting fewer tips," Woods said. NDP MP Libby Davies, whose riding of Vancouver East is a hot spot for grow-ops, agrees marijuana has to be regulated but noted the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police doesn't want Canada's drug laws "softened." Davies said she understands police frustration with investigating drug operators under the current legal system, but believes adding more resources is a waste of money. She echoed Woods' example of the failed War on Drugs in the United States. Davies recently participated in Parliament's special committee on the non-medical use of drugs, which recommended that possession and cultivation of small amounts of marijuana be decriminalized. Davies criticized the committee's failure to address the problem of people who have criminal records for simple possession or for transfer or cultivation of small amounts of pot. "If we accept that Canadians should not in future receive a criminal record for certain acts relating to marijuana, those convicted in the past should be pardoned under a general amnesty and their records erased," she wrote in a report to her constituents. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh