Pubdate: Sun, 14 Nov 2004 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Stephanie Rubec CANUCK BASES ARE LOADED MORE SOLDIERS TURNING TO POT, REPORTS SUGGEST DRUG USE among Canadian soldiers and defence department employees is on the rise, according to newly released documents. Two military police Criminal Intelligence Program reports obtained by Sun Media show marijuana is the drug of choice, with cocaine a distant second. "The trends illustrated in this report give indication that incidents of illicit drug usage by CF members or other persons on DND property will continue to rise, including the cultivation of marijuana plants," the July 2003 report says. And a January 2004 report says "illicit drug occurrences continue to increase at bases/wings across Canada." But drug offences are significantly lower in the military than in the civilian world, the reports indicate. Drug charges peaked in July of each year, and in 2003 military police had almost 30 cases involving drug charges. The Canadian Forces has a zero tolerance policy towards drug consumption in its ranks. GROW OPERATIONS The intelligence reports say soldiers caught with pot are sometimes trafficking and secretly growing it, especially at CFB Greenwood in Nova Scotia. From January 2002 to 2004, military police shut down 18 grow operations on bases across Canada, statistics show. National Investigation Service spokesman Capt. Mark Giles said the military's new offence tracking system is to blame for a perceived spike in drug offences because some files were lost beforehand. "And there has also been in the past year or two an increase in drug enforcement," Giles said, adding the military is "satisfied that the vast majority of Canadian Forces and DND personnel are not involved in drugs." According to the 2003 criminal intelligence report, most drug charges were laid against troops at CFB Esquimalt on Vancouver Island, followed by CFB Edmonton and CFB Borden. It recommends that the military set up special drug squads for the summer months when young recruits are in training, and launch an education strategy to deter soldiers from doing drugs. "Although cannabis is statistically the choice drug among users, there's a growing emergence of methamphetamine in the Prairie provinces," the 2004 national environmental assessment says. "Meth is a highly addictive stimulant and is slowly becoming the choice of drug among illicit drug users in the CF." TROOP TROUBLE Criminal trends at Canadian Forces bases according to military police reports: - - 8 Wing Trenton: There has been a significant increase in domestic violence, jumping from seven cases in 2002 to 48 last year. - - Western Area Training Centre Wainwright: Alcohol-related incidents involving soldiers are the most common offences, often including assaults. - - 17 Wing Winnipeg: At this air base, marijuana and cocaine are the drugs of choice. - - Shilo: A report says drug use is expected to increase with the arrival of 2 PPCLI this year. - - CFB Borden: Drug-related offences have increased in 2003, mostly among new recruits awaiting training. - - CFB Petawawa: In 2003 there was a "significant" increase in the number of family violence offences reported. Spousal assault doubled from the 2002 level of 16 cases. There has also been an increase in drug-related offences, with possession of marijuana charges doubling from 2002. - - CFB Kingston: The base and the Royal Military College are faced with numerous drug-related offences, and have seen complaints about the use of the date rape drug. - - Ottawa: A strong majority of the 1,832 investigations from Oct. 2002 to January 2004 were security related. - - CFB Gagetown: A five-month police operation led to 22 charges of trafficking and using marijuana, ecstasy, dilaudid and crack against seven Forces members. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh