Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 2004 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) a-49a1-83b8-b1c65c0aa644 Copyright: 2004 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Chris Johnson, CanWest News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) MASSIVE MARIJUANA RAID RATTLES TINY INTERIOR TOWN SEYMOUR ARM -- At first light, Allan Sterling, hearing a car outside his house, thought it was his buddy coming to collect firewood. Instead, it was six police officers, among about 150 raiding alleged marijuana grow-ops in Seymour Arm, population 70. Claiming he had no marijuana plants or weapons, Sterling says he was put face down on the floor, his hands behind his back, shown a warrant for his arrest, interrogated for three hours, taken by van to Kamloops, jailed until 3 a.m., and told to appear in Kamloops provincial court on Dec. 8. Drinking beer Wednesday near Shuswap Lake, Sterling and other residents accused police of arresting and releasing 16 innocent locals who didn't resist, dividing a community with few jobs, and destroying the town's reputation as a peaceful tourist haven for houseboats and hunters. "It's going to cause major separation between local people," said Sterling, 48, who rents out boating equipment. But police say they've made Seymour Arm safe for locals, who they say complained of harassment. In its first major operation, a combined forces team seized 50 weapons and 20,000 marijuana plants and growing equipment, which they were hauling out of town in a least seven rental trucks, said RCMP Supt. Marianne Ryan. About 30 officers from the Lower Mainland traveled on a logging road 160 kilometres northeast of Kamloops to join the raid, which Ryan said was a message to all remote areas of B.C. that "no one is immune to our combined law enforcement." "The crime is moving out. It is getting pushed out (of the Lower Mainland)," she said. "But we haven't stopped at the lower mainland boundaries." She said the area's isolation, with homes in the bush generating their own power, was "all done to reduce suspicion of what is ongoing in the area." "This community has been infiltrated by organized crime. They've taken advantage of the geography and remoteness of the area. They may think they're flying under the radar. All we have to do is lower the radar." Though the investigation has found no links to biker gangs, she said the growers, including one secluded home on Ireland Road where police seized 5,000 plants and four weapons, would "have to be connected," with "a well-established distribution network." However several locals spun a different story. They say the community of 70 is indeed "organized -- they volunteer to build each other's log houses and A-frames and a new dock. They say everybody has a gun to protect against cougars and bears on their doorstep. "If you're in the wilderness, a firearm is a tool, not a weapon," says John Rivette, 73, a retired geologist who first came to Seymour Arm in 1956. "Most people have them and register them." Police would not provide details of complaints they claimed they received from locals. Alfie Daniels, 78, who was born in Seymour Arm, said the growers helped the local economy by spending money and hiring builders, carpenters, electricians and plumbers. "They gave us more business, they were here buying stuff, buying food. I know if they were shut down we'd lose money here at the store." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D