Pubdate: Sun, 18 Apr 2004 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Darshan Lindsay Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) TIP LEADS TO MASSIVE DRUG BUST Two months ago, local police promised to push the drug trade out of Kamloops. On Thursday, they delivered in a big way by seizing 930 pounds of pure B.C. bud, packaged and ready for shipment. "Somebody's missing $2.5 million," an officer with the local detachment's beefed-up drug squad said. There for the raid on a compound on Kelly Douglas Road in the morning, the unidentified cop was glad to see police make such a big bust. "We can't prove it, but common sense would tell you something like this would have to be linked to organized crime . . . it feels good to get this quantity." The size of the loot, and the nature of the shipment, was possibly a first for Kamloops RCMP, at least in recent memory. Police surprised and arrested five men in the Valleyview compound, and seized nine lifts of plywood. Every cavity in the hollowed-out lifts was stuffed with two to three over-sized duffel bags filled with vacuum-sealed baggies of marijuana. "This is a very large and well-thought out operation and, because of the method being used, police feel that the marijuana was destined for shipment to the United States," RCMP spokesman Cpl. Mike Stewart said during a media conference. Police suspect the shipment would have been ready for transport either that day or the next. And while they say the nearly 1,000 pounds of marijuana was worth $2.5 million, it would fetch at least double, if not triple, that price in the United States. Police began their investigation just three days prior, acting on a tip from the public about suspicious activities in the Kelly Douglas Road area. Stewart said it appeared chainsaws were used on site to hollow out the plywood lifts. He said the nature of the operation took local police by surprise. "This is very different than what we normally see . . . It goes to show you no matter where you live, this activity goes on." The five suspects, aged 21 to 38, face drug-related charges. It's believed all are from Kamloops. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager