Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jul 2004 Source: Tillsonburg News (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Annex Publishing & Printing Inc. Contact: http://tillsonburgnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2388 Author: Deirdre Healey POLICE EXPECT SPEED LABS IN OXFORD If They Aren't Here Yet, They Are Coming, Say Cops Oxford police say it won't be long before speed labs begin popping up in the county as the drug becomes more prevalent among youth. Speed labs have been uncovered in neighbouring Perth County, and Oxford Community Police Sgt. Daryl Longworth said the drug trade is making its way towards Oxford. "I wouldn't be shocked to find speed labs appearing here," said Longworth. "Just like any other drug, it's cheaper to produce it yourself and cut out the middle man." Rural areas are prime spots for these labs because the chemicals used to make speed have strong odours that can easily be detected by neighbours or police. "The labs are isolated in rural areas and harder to detect," said Det. Brad Durfy of the OPP drug enforcement unit. The increase in the availability of speed is a national trend. A recent RCMP annual report on Canada's drug trade revealed police forces uncovered 37 speed labs in 2003 compared to two in 1998. The report suggests the reason for the increase is because organized crime has become heavily involved in the production and trafficking of the drug. "We have seen a big increase over past two years," said Durfy. "We have shut down speed labs in Perth County, Middlesex County and there was a mobile speed lab in a truck in Oxford. Five years ago there were none. Speed is a retro drug from the 1970s that has resurfaced in popularity." The drug produces alertness, confidence and raises levels of energy and stamina. It also reduces appetite and lessens the desire and ability to sleep. It can be swallowed, snorted, smoked, or injected. The report also states that marijuana grow operations are spreading to epidemic proportions across Canada and especially in Ontario. Over the past five years, police forces in Canada have seized an average of 1.1 million pot plants a year, a 500 per cent increase since 1993. Marijuana is reported by police forces as one of their main drug enforcement problems. Local police are also grappling with the surge in large growhouse operations. OCPS recently shut down a growhouse on Dundas Street in Woodstock, seizing plants with a street value of $1.6 million - the largest drug bust in the city's history. Longworth said growers appear to be moving away from residential areas to larger operations in warehouses or in a block of apartments in commercial areas, which is how the operation was set up on Dundas Street. He said the OCPS has shut down close to 30 growhouse operations in the past year. "The majority of the marijuana from large scale operations is sent to the U.S. where there is more of a market," said Longworth. "It is traded for cocaine and ecstasy, which is then imported back here." Police said the two men involved in the Dundas Street bust appeared to have been connected to a larger operation involving processing labs in Toronto for distribution in Ontario and the United States. That also reflects figures released this week that suggest the number of Canadians aged 15 or older who admit to getting high on marijuana or hashish nearly doubled in 13 years, with the highest rates among teenagers. About three million people in that age group reported that they used cannabis at least once in the year before the Canadian Community Health Survey, which was conducted in 2002. The Statistics Canada study also found more people were taking five other drugs: cocaine or crack, ecstasy, LSD and other hallucinogens, amphetamines (speed), and heroin. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart