Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jun 2003 Source: Mirror (CN QU) Copyright: 2003 Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltee Contact: http://www.montrealmirror.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/267 Author: Patrick Lejtenyi Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) SUPPLY AND BE DAMNED Pot Growers Fear For Their Livelihood And Liberty Even More If Decrim Comes To Pass Jerry doesn't grow all that much marijuana, maybe a dozen or so plants with one lamp, but he's still worried. All this talk about decrim and tougher penalties against growers just isn't making sense to the Montreal man, who says that the new Cannabis Reform Bill is simply going to make life tougher on small fry like him. "I think this is going to be a big help to the Hells Angels," says Jerry, who requested the Mirror not use his real name, fearing unwanted scrutiny from other interested parties. "I think that a lot of people who are [growing small amounts] are going to see what happens. Organized crime has the recipes, lamps are cheap and everyone knows the basics of growing. The Hells Angels are not intimidated by stricter punishments for growing, and there's an endless need for dope." With demand as high as it is, the reforms are bad news for growers large and small. As it stands, possession of under 15 grams of marijuana will result in a potential fine, between 15 and 30 in a fine or a summons to appear in criminal court and, most important to Jerry and other growers, up to 14 years in prison for anyone caught with more than 50 plants - double the penalty as it currently stands. So independent growers are looking at hard time, and that scares the pants off people like Jerry. And it might also be a bummer for recreational smokers. "This might drive up the price of dope," says Jerry, "because the smoother, less professional people are going to get out of the business. I suspect that if this goes through, it's going to scare some people away. And when you have more repression, you're going to get higher prices." Free enterprise will rule Not everyone thinks the situation will be that dire, though. Marijuana Party leader Marc-Boris St-Maurice says the future of marijuana growth, distribution and consumption are going to remain "business as usual. Very little will change in the real world. You'll have a higher maximum but people will still be able to argue for a lower sentence, as they do now, and the police will still lie about the crop value, and the Compassion Club will still get busted. Business as usual." The cops say the same thing. When asked what effect the new legislation will have on Project Charlemagne, a joint RCMP and local police task force targetting indoor hydroponic growers in municipalities on the north shore, RCMP Sergeant Richard Martel says, "It'll be business as usual." Since September 2001, the Project crackdown on growers has resulted in hundreds of arrests and the seizure of thousands of plants. In almost weekly releases, sometimes within days of each other, the Mounties announce that they have dismantled another indoor hydroponic grow operation and tout the value of the seizure on the black market. In 2003 alone, there have been 23 announcements publicizing busts of various size and value. In total, says Martel, Project Charlemagne has netted 148,400 plants, 768 pounds of buds, 622 kilograms of shake, 1.5 kilos of hash and $226,969 in cash. Over 400 people have been arrested. When asked how many of these people had links to organized crime, Sgt. Martel says, "That's a hard question to answer. But anytime anyone grows marijuana to sell and not to consume, it has to be considered organized because there is a network somewhere." The latest bust, dated May 23, stated that Mountie investigators dismantled a grow in St-Pierre-de-Broughton, near Thetford Mines, which contained 3,247 cannabis plants in a hen house converted into a hydroponic greenhouse. Two people were arrested, and equipment, documents, over $5,000 in cash and 106 lamps were seized. Other busts, such as the April 30 arrest in Oka of Robert Gagnier, 54, raked in, according to an RCMP release, "935 organically grown cannabis plants, 5.5 kilograms of bulk cannabis, 176 grams of cannabis buds and $120,000 in cash. This seizure is worth more than $1-million on the black market." St-Maurice, however, disputes the value figures. "From my calculations, police overestimate by 10 times the value of a crop," he says, "consistently. Every single time. Thus making a grower look much worse in the eyes of the law, and that way they justify asking for more severe penalties." Chill and out But will growers get them? If - a big if - the law is passed, will Quebec judges, among the most lenient in the country when it comes to marijuana charges, be inclined to hand down stiffer sentences to growers, particularly those unaffiliated to organized crime? St-Maurice is skeptical about whether the maximum penalty of 14 years jail time for large-scale growers will really be enforced by the courts, but he does predict a chilling effect. He says raising the maximum is another move by the federal government to seek stiffer sentences for growers, which judges have by and large been reluctant to hand down. "The proposed sentences of seven to 14 years will make it harder and less attractive for the mom and pop growers," he says. "Eighty per cent of growers are unaffiliated with organized crime. They're everywhere. From the lowest-rent neighbourhood in Montreal to upper Westmount to Sept-Iles to Lac St-Jean. Everywhere." Prior arrests are sure to be a factor in sentencing, something that doesn't bode well for Marco Renda, a medical marijuana grower and activist living near Toronto. "With what I'm growing, I'm now looking at 14 years," says Renda, who grows without a federal exemption. "I already have a prior for cultivating, so you can imagine what can happen." Not that a little thing like 14 years in jail is going to deter Renda from growing marijuana and distributing seeds, advice and defiance from his Web site (www.treatingyourself.com). "I welcome the police to try to do something with me," he says. "I'm not afraid to say, 'Yes, I'm doing it.' Someone has to." As for Jerry, who's never been arrested for growing weed, he'll continue his small operation as before. "I'm just glad I live in Quebec," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom