Pubdate: Thu, 11 Mar 2004 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Sherri Zickefoose and Emma Poole GROW OP RUINS SOUTHEAST HOME In front of a fence sign reading "Keep off the grass," police and the hazmat team donned protective, hooded body suits, face masks and oxygen tanks before raiding one of the most toxic residential pot growing operations they've ever seen. The entire ceiling of an Ogden house was swathed in a hairy fur coat of green and black mould. Webs filled with hundreds of spider mites were spun in every poisonous corner. Police searching the unassuming white and grey bungalow at 2503 74th Ave. S.E. for illegal marijuana plants Wednesday night said the entire house is ruined and will be condemned. They removed hundreds of marijuana plants from the basement worth around $400,000, police said. "This is by the far the worst residence I've ever seen," said Sgt. Roger Morrison of the Police drug unit, who added a Crimestoppers tip led the Calgary police and RCMP "green team" to the house. Police say the unassuming white and grey bungalow's secret pot plantation was being operated by an Asian organized crime ring. Charges have not yet been laid, but police say they are closing in on a suspect. The smelly garbage strewn about inside and absence of furniture indicate the house was solely for cultivating the illegal crops and was being "baby-sat" by drug harvesters, police say. Police collected about 300 pungent weedy plants from an illegal basement garden oasis, which was encased with black plastic sheeting and tape to create a tropical growing climate. Teenagers and neighbourhood residents gathered on the street corner to watch the spectacle of firefighters and police removing bag after bag of black plastic sacks stuffed full of grass. Save for the black mould oozing out of the house's front, the corner lot bungalow looks like any other residence -- complete with Christmas lights on its roof. The culprits were stealing electricity by bypassing the meter, police say. Attempts to ventilate the air were exceedingly poor, according to police, who said damp air had mould growing out of control on the plywood ceiling upstairs. The moist conditions used to grow the narcotics encourage the growth of dangerous black mould -- a fungus that causes respiratory damage, and has been linked to miscarriages and the destruction of brain tissue. "It's just a very, very nasty house," said Morrison. City health inspectors have condemned 18 houses since last June, all of which were too unsafe and unhealthy to live in again. This year, nearly 14,000 marijuana plants worth $18 million have been seized. The police drug-bust team, called the Southern Alberta Marijuana Investigation Team, was formed last December in response to marijuana grow ops identified across the country as thriving ventures wreaking havoc in terms of criminal activity, public health and safety. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart