Pubdate: Tue, 05 Oct 2004 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Dan Arsenault, Crime Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) 10 ARRESTED IN LARGE POT SWEEP Ritzy, Empty Homes Were Used To Grow Marijuana, Police Say RCMP arrested 10 Halifax-area people Monday after searching 19 sites involved in a sophisticated marijuana-growing operation that used expensive homes just for growing the drug. More than 100 officers from the RCMP, Halifax Regional Police, Truro Police Service, federal Immigration and Passport service and Canada Border Services Agency worked on the case. More than 4,000 plants, 10 vehicles and a significant amount of cash were seized. "We have a very successful investigation here," RCMP spokesman Const. Gary Smith said at a news conference. "It's organized crime. There could be more arrests, there could be more seizures." He wouldn't say who was running the operation, whether police apprehended the leaders or if the growing activity was linked to a similar setup police busted in Moncton on July 27. Some sources said there is a connection. Monday's arrests involved nine men and a woman. Immigration officers attended the raids because police weren't sure all the suspects were Canadian. "I understand that there are people of Asian descent that are involved," Const. Smith said. He described the arrests as uneventful. The 10 people will face charges of cultivating marijuana, possessing marijuana for the purpose of trafficking and theft of electricity. Police simultaneously searched many homes worth more than $200,000 in Fall River, Sackville and Tantallon, plus one on Saywood Drive in Bible Hill. Many were uninhabited, with the plants inside being tended to by people living in apartments and condominiums in Clayton Park and Bedford. Those residences were also searched. The houses were partitioned, with rooms arranged according to the plants' stage of maturity. "A lot of sophistication has gone into this," Const. Smith said. He said the use of expensive homes was meant to provide more security for the illegal activity. "Obviously, it's a way of concealment by going into upscale residential areas," he said. In the July raid in Moncton, 15 homes were searched and 13 people of Vietnamese descent arrested. Some 5,100 plants and 31 kilograms of dried pot were seized. Police said the total haul was worth $10 million. Const. Smith wouldn't attach any monetary value to Monday's seizures. He said police have communicated with their New Brunswick counterparts but he wouldn't elaborate. The provincial Community Services Department carried out a child apprehension order involving two children at a home in the Glen Haven area near Tantallon. A Vietnamese translator was required. Sources said other child apprehension orders were also carried out. Police invited the media to the site of a raid at 55 Kata Ct. in Upper Tantallon. They displayed a 1.5-metre plant and a large amount of harvested plant buds sitting in the box police found it in. The house's underground wiring was reworked to bypass meters, giving the house illegal electricity for free. Const. Smith said that type of wiring - along with the use of chemicals and the potential for a buildup of mould - displays the dangers of growing operations. The electrical system of another raided house appeared quite dangerous to police, he said. "The wires themselves were very hot," he said. "I think it was an underground electrical connection." The Kata Court house is very clean and at the end of a cul de sac. It's less than two years old and the current owners bought it from the previous residents last fall, neighbours said. The house is assessed at $199,300 and the owner is listed as Duc Lu Tin, according to Property Online, the province's Internet real estate site. A neighbour down the street who asked not to be identified said area residents expected police to go to that house sooner or later. "A neighbour was suspicious," she said. The lone, male resident of number 55 didn't associate with others and came and went at strange times, creating an uneasy feeling among the neighbours, she said. "You were just always kind of suspicious . . . wondering what they were up to." She had just one meeting with a man at the house, last Halloween when she and others went there with children. A man there looked anxious and wanted to keep people away from the property, she said. "We just went up to the top of the street and he was coming out of his driveway. He just rolled down his window and threw some candy at us and that was it." Asked to describe the man, she just said he was Asian. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek