Pubdate: Sat, 27 Nov 2004 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Tracy Mclaughlin, Special To The Sun Note: Follow this series at http://www.mapinc.org/source/Toronto+Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) POT TRADED FOR COKE Canuck Growers Bring Narcotic Back From U.S. THE OPP is getting ready to release one of the most in-depth, comprehensive and "eye-opening" projects ever done which shows marijuana harvested from an epidemic of grow houses is going south in direct trade for cocaine. The full details of project Long Haul won't be released to the public until some time next week, but Det. Staff-Sgt. Rick Barnum of the OPP Drug Enforcement Section says the results are "mind-boggling." Through the course of a year, the OPP in conjunction with U.S. and Canadian border officials and the B.C. criminal organization unit traced the pattern of marijuana that was exchanged for cocaine bound for the streets of Ontario. 'Blew Me Away' "Long Haul really opened my eyes to the incredible amount of cocaine that is coming (for) the marijuana that is grown here," Barnum said. "It blew me away. I never would have believed that it was so big. Pound after pound after pound of coke is hitting our streets in exchange for our marijuana -- Long Haul proves it." Thousands of pounds of marijuana are crossing the U.S. borders from Canada by truckload, boat and plane on a weekly basis, he says. The project highlights one fact that drug cops already suspected but couldn't prove -- Canada is a virtual playground for grow operators because of the lax sentencing compared to the U.S. In one year, the study showed that about 2,000 grow houses operate in the entire U.S. compared to 25,000 in Ontario -- with about 15,000 of those in the Greater Toronto Area. "It doesn't make sense for the bad guys to grow it there (in the U.S.) because they will get put away," Barnum said. "They may as well grow it in Canada where you can get away with it." Barnum says intelligence and undercover tactics to bust grow houses are not enough and it is up to judges to stop the plague of grow-ops. 'Open Their Eyes' "We can't just keep kicking down doors and busting these places -- that's like sucking the water out of a swimming pool with a straw," he says. "Our judges need to open their eyes to the reality of what this costs our society." It is not the laws that need to change, he said. Canada's laws are already stiff -- a conviction for production of marijuana carries a maximum sentence of seven years while a conviction for possession for the purpose of trafficking carries a maximum life sentence. "We're not looking for tougher laws -- we're looking at getting judges to apply the laws we already have," Barnum says. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake