Pubdate: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 Source: Vaughan Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Vaughan Citizen. Contact: http://www.yorkregion.com/yr/newscentre/vaughan/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2432 Author: Roger Varley CHOPPER OR NOT, POT RAIDS CONTINUE MEETING Four Vaughan Houses Raided In Past Two Days York Regional Police drug squad officers are not letting lack of helicopter surveillance slow down their battle against indoor marijuana-growing operations. An average of two indoor grow operations a day are being raided in York Region, an undercover member of the squad said yesterday. "It's like writing tickets," said another officer at the scene of a raid on Belvia Drive in the Dufferin Street, Rutherford Road area of Vaughan. Four indoor growing operations were raided in the last two days in Vaughan alone, with at least four people arrested. On Glenkindle Avenue, near Major Mackenzie Drive and Jane Street, a police dog found a man hiding in an attic with a cell phone and a flashlight Tuesday, about an hour after police entered the house. A man and a woman were arrested yesterday at a house on Sunset Ridge in the Major Mackenzie Drive/ Islington Avenue area during a raid. Earlier this month, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled police could not use helicopters equipped with infra-red cameras to randomly locate suspected growing operations. The technology is used to detect excessive heat escaping from buildings which is typically produced by powerful lights used to grow marijuana indoors. One undercover drug squad officer said while not using the helicopter has impeded investigations, police are still finding more than enough grow houses to keep them busy. Both yesterday's and Tuesday's raids resulted from tips by Hydro Vaughan, which had discovered metre bypasses while doing random checks at the houses. Indoor marijuana-growing operations typically steal power directly from the underground power lines so the large amount of electricity used to run the operation doesn't show on the hydro metre. At the Belvia Drive address -- a one-storey house on a quiet, narrow street - -- police removed almost 250 plants from the basement of a rented home. An officer said the plants were about three weeks from harvest, with each plant having a street value of approximately $1,000. Another 400 or so young plants were recovered at a stylish two-storey home on Sunset Ridge and almost 500 plants were found at each of the two houses raided Tuesday. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens