Pubdate: Mon, 15 Nov 2004 Source: Weekly Journal, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Transcontinental Media Contact: http://www.neighbourhoodnews.ca/journal Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3567 Author: Steve Coleman, Neighbourhood News Staff DRUGS PART I: DEALING WITH DRUGS Police Have More Variety To Take Off Streets Old standbys like marijuana, cocaine and LSD are still the escape of choice for many, but a new generation has adopted a whole new generation of pills -- including ecstasy and the date rape drug. White pills. Purple pills. Prescription pills. Pills like ecstasy smell like licorice and give the users who take them the urge to hug everything in sight. Then there's a capful of salty-tasting stuff to wash it down. Maybe it's been labeled as "fire water" or "Liquid Ecstasy." These days, there's a very real chance it could be a concoction of degreasing solvent or floor stripper mixed with drain cleaner that's sold as GHB - - the date rape drug. The face of drugs has changed in the last decade. "The sky is pretty much the limit," says Ottawa Police Staff Sgt. Marc Pinault, head of Ottawa's drug unit. "Someone is always coming out with a new substance to try out. If someone can make money off it, they will." Ottawa grew with amalgamation. So has the market for illicit drugs. Before the Gloucester and Nepean forces became districts within the Ottawa Police Service, Ottawa drug officers kept an eye on 400,000 potential customers inside Ottawa's former city limits. Within those limits, the former cities of Gloucester and Nepean each had about 100,000 people. Four years after amalgamation officially erased all of the old municipal borders, Ottawa police have a clientele of almost one million. The potential market has expanded. The number of drug enforcement officers taking narcotics off the street hasn't kept pace. There were about 30 drug officers in the old days. After the Ottawa, Nepean and Gloucester police forces merged, the amalgamated city's drug unit dropped to 17 officers to cover an area four times as large. Between 1995 and 2000, Ottawa's drug unit was a combined effort of the Ottawa Police, the OPP and the RCMP. That partnership also disappeared in 2000 with municipal amalgamation. "I don't want to sound like I'm complaining," said Pinault: "Our work has gone through the roof and our resources have diminished. Our best resource is vigilant neighbours and people who care about their neighbourhood." Grow Houses Marijuana grow houses made their first real inroads in Ottawa about 2001 after Asian gangs got a firm foothold in the greater Vancouver area and fine-tuned their operations. Many of those grow houses can be found in Ottawa East neighbourhoods. The need to keep their plants out of sight of the city police force's airplane usually means crooks will locate their production to a quiet home on a dead-end residential street. Crooks have targeted several Orleans homes in recent years as a part of a larger city-wide trend toward indoor growing operations. The last time police closed an east-end grow house, they found 527 marijuana plants at a Notre Dame Street address in downtown Orleans on Jan. 29, 2003. At $1,000 a plant, police estimated the total value of the crop at $527,000. During the 2003 raid, police also uncovered a rat's nest of wires they labelled a "hydro bypass" and $43,000 of hydroponic growing equipment. For crooks, a typical marijuana plant produces between two and three ounces of weed at $300 an ounce. The $1,000 street value police put on a marijuana plant includes both the leaves and oil that might be distilled at a drug lab. Most of the indoor growing operations in Ottawa are run by Vietnamese criminals who like to keep a low profile, says Pinault. They don't give themselves a catchy name the way bikers are prone to do. Besides the high cost to honest customers -- when crooks reroute wires past the meter to steal electricity -- innocent people are hurt in other ways. For instance, the high humidity levels in the grow house usually lead to high levels of mold, rendering a home uninhabitable should someone be unfortunate enough to buy it later. Police issued one of their first official warnings about grow houses on June 8, 2000 about the "risks posed by indoor marijuana grows." Police blamed rerouted wiring and stolen electricity as the cause of two house fires in two different parts of the city. The last large crackdown on marijuana growing operations, Project MOTA, ran this spring from April 18 to May 31, after an appeal to the public produced 65 locations of suspicious houses, city-wide. Ottawa Police teamed up with the RCMP "A" Division drug section to pull the plug on the hydroponics. Officers executed search warrants at 21 addresses, recovering 5,949 plants, 45.5 kilograms of dried leaves and $451,000 in equipment and property. They arrested 24 people. Ottawa police, however, have been fortunate in one way, dealing with the current drug problem. They haven't had to deal with the booby traps other police forces have run into as they try to cut down outdoor pot fields lurking in farmers' corn crops. In the past, growers have stuck razor blades in the stalks, set up shotgun traps and laid down spike belts to protect their crops. Moves by the federal government in recent years to decriminalize marijuana and turn possession of small amounts of pot into the equivalent of a traffic ticket won't change the way the police department enforces the law, at least in the near future. "I haven't heard anybody prove it's good for you," Pinault says of marijuana. "If that page is ripped out of the book, we'll enforce what's still there. We enforce the laws. It's not my call." Cocaine And Other Nasties There are plenty of drugs other than marijuana, out there to watch out for, Pinault says. Cocaine is still one of the city's more prevalent drugs. It sells for about $1,700 an ounce. Street level dealers get their cocaine at a purity of about 70-80 per cent before diluting the contents to about 30 per cent for sale. By the time the drug hits the street, it has been cut with dextrose, baking soda or any other kind of white powder that won't change the cocaine's appearance. Police have raided a few downtown Ottawa crack houses in the past, but in the east end drugs are more likely to surface at house or bush parties. Overall, the amount of crack in the Nation's Capital is on the rise. Ottawa is also a "good heroine market," although heroine users tend to hang around more with other junkies, Pinault says. Like heroine, ecstasy is another drug that becomes an instant addiction. For awhile, a Canotek Road store front was one of the largest producers in Canada. Complaints from neighbours about a licorice smell led police to the Beacon Hill site on Jan. 7, 2003. By the time drug officers closed the doors, they'd found enough chemicals at the inconspicuous Canotek Road warehouse to produce more than $20 million in ecstasy pills at a retail price of $25 to $35 a pop. The estimates were based on $50,000-$75,000 in chemicals, including $14,000 worth of sassafras oil, seized by the end of the raid. Ecstasy was first mixed in 1912 as a possible appetite suppressant and later abandoned before the rave scene adopted it as its drug of choice in the 1990s. The man who police arrested, six months after neighbours first reported odd smells to the labour board, told anyone who asked that he was in the silk screening business. Another area where street-level demand has gone up in recent years is prescription drugs like OxyContin, a narcotic approved as a prescription pain killer when morphine won't work. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)