Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2003 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.fyilondon.com/londonfreepress/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Kelly Pedro, Free Press Crime Reporter HOME POT FARMS A GROWING PROBLEM London police say they could raid a house used only to grow pot every day if they had the time. "There's so many out there, I'm sure we don't even scratch the surface," said one undercover officer in the drug unit. Since January, London police have searched at least 24 homes and apartments for illegal grow operations. More than $5.5 million in drugs have been seized. Police regularly find 500 to 600 marijuana plants in a single home. A few years ago, it was rare to find more than 100 plants in a grow operation. "Entire houses have been converted to the growing of marijuana," said one undercover drug officer. It's a trend that's making its way across Southwestern Ontario. Area provincial police have seized nearly $6 million in drugs, $110,000 in grow equipment and 5,742 marijuana plants so far this year in the counties of Middlesex, Elgin, Oxford, Perth, Grey, Bruce, Haldimand, Norfolk, Brant and Wellington, said OPP Det. Sgt. Brad Durfy. "It's been a busy (few) months," he said recently. "We're seeing an influx of the industrial-size grows" -- including as many as 6,000 plants in one home. In the 10 counties, OPP have searched 23 marijuana grow houses and charged 58 people with 85 drug-related offences. London police have charged 33 people and laid more than 100 drug-related charges since January. In most cases, the homeowner hasn't lived in the house, just used it to grow pot. Police say that's becoming more common because real estate in London is inexpensive compared to big cities such as Toronto. Absentee landlords -- people who buy or rent a home to grow drugs but don't actually live in it -- also make it tough for police to track them. Of the more than 30 searches in London, 14 have come from the drug unit. The rest are the result of police stumbling onto grow operations after responding to a call for other reasons. Organized crime often finances the startup of an operation -- about $30,000. "They've realized the huge money potential from these operations and, of course, it's just like a farm," said the undercover police officer. "The bigger your operation, the more efficient it is and the more money you can make off of it." City police say one plant represents $1,000 in potential income for drug dealers. Marijuana takes about three months to mature from start to finish, so most operations can get four crops a year. "You can start to add up the numbers there and see what kind of money you could bring in," the officer said. For example, the average grow house with 250 plants, worth about $1,000 each, would yield about $1 million a year. Utilities lose millions every year because of bypass operations -- siphoning off electricity -- throughout the province. A large operation would use between 30 and 40 1,000-watt grow bulbs 12 to 18 hours a day, police said. That's about $2,000 in monthly power bills that are never paid because people are stealing electricity. Unmonitored houses with power bypasses are also a safety hazard. "These houses are fire traps," said Det. Mike Klimm of York Regional police, who co-ordinated Operation Green Sweep, a nationwide blitz on grow houses that started in January last year. By the end of the blitz, 46,796 pot plants had been seized. Police say it's just a matter of time before a London grow house catches fire. "I've seen one where the bypass (electrical wiring) is melted and charred because it was done so poorly," the undercover London cop said. The rapid increase in the number of grow operations started in British Columbia about 10 years ago. There are an estimated 10,000 grow operations in the Toronto area, and it's suspected one in every 100 houses in nearby Markham is a grow operation, Klimm said. Some of the drugs grown in Canada stay in the country, but most wind up in the U.S. That's because Canadian drug penalties are more relaxed than those south of the border, Klimm said. A first-time offender with a large operation -- more than 500 plants -- might get a year in jail in Canada. In the U.S., penalties range from 36 to 87 months in prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth