Pubdate: Wed, 13 Oct 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Chris Johnson, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?216 (CN Police) NO POT AT THE END OF THE RAINBOW Up-Country Growers Learn They're Not Beyond The Law Off the grid, underground, but not above the law. Residents of tiny Seymour Arm, 160 kilometres northeast of Kamloops on a gut-wrenching logging road around Shuswap Lake, thought they were beyond the reach of police. A sign at Daniel's Store and Marina summed up the local Wild West attitude: "We shoot every third smoker. The second just left." With few jobs around, and fewer bears and moose left to hunt, a new generation of homesteaders and neo-hippies, some from Alberta, grew one of B.C.'s leading cash crops -- marijuana -- which they claim fuels the economy of small communities across Canada. In A-frames and log cabins often kilometres apart, they had plenty of cheap land to grow cannabis outside. But they grew it indoors, using lights and diesel generators -- in some cases large enough to power an apartment building -- to grow "B.C. bud" that police say is 10 times more potent than grass smoked in the 1960s. While one operation, known as "the Big House" allegedly had 170 lights and 4,000 square feet of growing space, other growers claimed to be "mom-and-pop ops" cultivating it for medicinal purposes or their own use. At 7 a.m. on Oct. 5, with green-and-gold mountainsides reflecting on a glassy lake, many growers were just waking up when a combined force of about 150 police officers, including 30 from the Lower Mainland, swooped down on Seymour Arm, population 70. A police helicopter landed on a lawn. Unmarked squad cars stormed up the logging road. SWAT teams fanned out in a four-kilometre radius and executed 28 search warrants, handcuffing suspects and ripping apart growing operations. Al Sterling and Chris Dirks say they and 14 other suspects were taken by van and jailed in Kamloops until 3 a.m. Oct. 6, charged with drug and weapons offences. They accused police of overkill, disturbing the peace, and ruining their pioneering lives. Residents were stunned to see police based in a houseboat. Near the town's only pub, a man in an FBI shirt cleaned six portable toilets. Near a pristine beach, crews hauled away equipment and about 20,000 plants in rental trucks ironically bearing an ad saying "We got 'em." With no hotels around, some police stayed with an alleged grower. Even some retirees who don't smoke pot said the growers were harmless, and the raid would ruin the town's reputation among tourists in houseboats. Others said they were afraid to talk or leave their homes, fearing arrest or retribution. Some said the growers had gone too far. Police Supt. Marianne Ryan said the raid would send a message to other remote areas that "no one is immune to our combined law enforcement. The crime is moving out. But we haven't stopped at the Lower Mainland boundaries." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek