Pubdate: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 Source: Markham Economist & Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Metroland Printing Contact: http://www.yorkregion.com/yr/newscentre/markhameconomistandsun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2360 Author: Martin Derbyshire Note: from MAP. Yes, this was printed in at least four newspapers. JAIL POT GROWERS, CHIEF SAYS Ontario Police Chiefs Want Minimum Two-Year Sentence With the number of marijuana grow operations reaching "epidemic proportions", York Region's top cop wants mandatory minimum sentences for anyone convicted of cultivating the cash crop. "There are automatic sentences for crimes involving firearms. We need minimum sentences for marijuana grow labs and they have got to be substantive," York Regional Police Chief Armand La Barge told the Rotary Club of Markham Sunrise at a meeting Wednesday morning. "We have to let these people know they're not just going to walk away with house arrest." Chief La Barge's push is being backed by chiefs across the province urging the federal government to bring in minimum sentences of two years as a deterrent for marijuana growers. "The judicial system must implement tougher sentences and assurance that judges will impose these stiffer penalties," said a January 2004 Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police report on grow operations. "Grow ops are a serious threat to the public and police officers." The association claims there are now more than 15,000 operations in Ontario, up 250 per cent over the past three to five years. In York Region alone, 173 pot labs were raided in 2003, up from 170 the year before. Police made 136 arrests, laid 342 charges and found plants with a street value of $52 million. Crimes including murder, robbery, and home invasions have all been linked to local grow operations, Chief La Barge said. He added although police are often just arresting crop sitters in connection with the operations, the force has been aggressively pursuing the organized crime element involved. However, with the average convicted marijuana grow operator receiving as little as 90 days to nine months in prison, he said officers still need help from their judicial partners. "There needs to be a two-year or one-year minimum sentence to act as a deterrence," he said. "Some (growers) are just getting house arrest or fines. They get house arrest and are forced to sit around the same house they were growing marijuana in. It's not right." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake