Pubdate: Fri, 24 Oct 2003 Source: Scarborough Mirror, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The Scarborough Mirror Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/scarborough/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2198 Author: Susan O'Neill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) 'AN ORGANIZED CRIME GANG WAR' Police are urging residents to be on the lookout for any suspicious activity in their neighbourhoods after gunfire erupted outside a marijuana grow house in northwest Scarborough early Sunday. "This is an organized crime gang war," Staff Insp. Gary Ellis, unit commander of the homicide squad, told reporters Wednesday morning when he revealed that a weekend murder on Wellpark Boulevard was the result of a gunfight between competing gangs. Ellis warned that Toronto could become like Chicago in the 1920s when organized crime gangs were shooting up the streets fighting one another unless the country's "lax legislation" on marijuana is addressed. "This person was shot and killed protecting a marijuana grow operation," he said of the 22-year-old Chinese victim who came to Canada on a student visa about three years ago. Ellis said police are still trying to locate the deceased's next of kin in China. He told reporters the young man had no address, no means of supporting himself and no family here in Canada. "He was a soldier. He was running back to this house to protect the commodity," Ellis said. "We believe he was armed as well and he is now dead." A second man, aged 21, was also shot. He remains in hospital and is expected to recover. Ellis said there were two separate groups involved in the shooting Sunday, one that was running the grow operation and the other that attempted to rob the house. "This is a very dangerous situation where we're very concerned that it's going to erupt in a cycle of violence where we will end up with many people killed on our streets," Ellis said. He reported there were 13 "combatants" involved in the incident, including five robbers who were attempting to steal the pot. The robbers triggered an alarm and eight others showed up to defend the property, including the man who died. "As soon as they arrived on scene they were blasted by gun fire," Ellis said. "There's enough weapons here to arm an army and the scariest thing out of this is bullets were flying that penetrated the wall of houses across the street." Ellis said an elderly couple narrowly escaped being hit by stray bullets, which penetrated the wall of their bedroom. He also said that had officers arrived on scene during the shooting spree, they "would have been met with a hail of gunfire. "It is a very dangerous situation. It's organized crime. It's international and the concern again is we have these grow houses popping up all over our city," Ellis said. He reported two men are wanted in connection with an Oct. 7 shooting related to a grow house in downtown Toronto. He also said $2.5 million worth of marijuana plants were seized at an industrial unit at 5621 Finch Ave. E. in Scarborough just last week. "We need a public awareness of the seriousness of this crime," Ellis said. "We need everyone to be aware it's organized crime and that it poses a significant risk to people in the area from house fires from the electricity being bypassed, from the gunfire." The police are asking the public to be aware in their communities. In an interview Thursday he said grow houses are typically boarded up, including the windows. "If cars are coming and going at all times and nobody seems to be residing there, that's a huge clue," he said, noting grow operations are not run by one particular cultural group. "We're seeing this as an emerging trend," he told the media. Ellis would not comment specifically on the nature of the weapons used in the incident, saying only there were firearms, machetes and clubs. "The whole range to have a war on a nice residential street where people were sleeping on a Sunday morning," he said. Area resident Ali Shah said his wife Wajeeha awoke to the sounds of gunfire. "She came from an area (in Pakistan) where she constantly heard gunshots," he said, adding his wife was surprised to hear the familiar sound on their residential street. "My wife was sleeping and she heard two shots around 6:30 a.m. They were about 30 seconds apart," he said. "By 8 a.m. there was a bunch of people out front. Everything was closed off." Shah said his family has lived in their Wellpark Boulevard home for almost 20 years. "We know pretty much everybody up and down the street," he said. "Right here we're pretty close knit." Shah said there are a lot of elderly people in the neighbourhood, which has seen its share of police activity in recent months. He reported a neighbour's house had been robbed twice recently and said another nearby home was raided for marijuana this past summer. "This was kind of unexpected," he said of the shooting Sunday. "The area is getting pretty bad." Anyone with information in relation to the murder is asked to contact the homicide squad at 416-808-7400 or CrimeStoppers at 416-222-TIPS. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin