Pubdate: Sat, 20 Mar 2004 Source: Tri-City News (CN BC) Copyright: 2004, Tri-City News Contact: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239 Author: Janis Cleugh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations COPS TEAM UP ON POT A new police team dedicated to cracking down on pot farms in Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam will start this summer or early fall, a crowd heard this week at a forum on marijuana grow-ops. Sgt. Steve LeClair, who is in charge of Coquitlam RCMP's street enforcement, said the six-member unit will be responsible for taking tips about grow-ops, identifying the ones that have the greatest potential for successful prosecution, getting search warrants and dismantling pot farms. Of the six Mounties added this year in Coquitlam and PoCo, which contract the RCMP to police their cities, four will be deployed to the new Marijuana Enforcement Team and two will go into traffic services, said Coquitlam detachment Supt. Ric Hall. Hall admitted the dedicated "green team" is long overdue "but it's only now that we've been given the resources to do it," he said. Hall told the crowd at Coquitlam city hall Tuesday he receives a call a day on a traffic issue or a possible grow-op. But the 179-member detachment "is stretched pretty thin on occasion" and can't get to all of the complaints, he said. "There has to be a realization on the public's part that the RCMP can do so much," he said. "It's time and people." LeClair said the current four-member drug squad often trains general duty officers to help dismantle grow-ops but, because of the large turnover, the training can be for naught. In the last two years, Coquitlam RCMP has shut down more than 420 grow-ops and is now investigating more than 200 tips on marijuana farms, drug labs and other drug operations, said Coquitlam-Maillardville MLA Richard Stewart, who hosted the forum. BC Hydro's Tom Brown said the Crown corporation has three full-time staff to investigate theft of power and "99.9999 per cent of the time, it's a grow op when we find a theft." The company can then pass on information to the RCMP about a grow-op, which gives officers the grounds to obtain a search warrant, Brown said. Hydro investigators confirmed 106 diversions of power at Lower Mainland homes in the first two months of this year alone, Brown said. B.C. Solicitor-General Rich Coleman said grow-ops are run by organized crime and marijuana is trading "kilo for kilo" for cocaine in the United States. He also said half of all pot on the streets is laced with cocaine or speed to get the user hooked on harder drugs. In the Fraser Valley, which Coleman represents as an MLA, there will be about 4,000 grow-ops this year, he said, versus about 10 across the border in Whatcom County, Washington. "Similar-sized jurisdictions -what's the difference?" he asked. "The difference is that in Whatcom County and Washington State, they have punitive penalties and they seize assets. "That's what we should be doing because we shouldn't let people profit from crime," he said. "I expect to have this legislation no later than the fall." Marijuana cultivators, Coleman said, will find the easiest place to grow "so I don't want to [have] the easiest jurisdiction in the business. I would like to see us get a lot tougher. "That means we need help, particularly from the federal government." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin