Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 2004 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: The Windsor Star 2004 Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsor/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Craig Pearson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/largest+seizure HEMP STORE RAIDED Police Seize Narcotics And $240,000 In Cash The owner of a downtown hemp shop made his first court appearance Friday after police raided his store and found a substantial quantity of narcotics and $240,000 in cash -- marking the largest seizure of money from a drug bust in Windsor history. The search Thursday around 1 p.m. of Harvest Moon also uncovered loose marijuana, 85 marijuana plants, and psilocybin -- commonly known as magic mushroom -- which police estimate together have a street value of $149,000. "The drug enforcement officers took a couple of hours to search the place," Windsor police spokesman Staff Sgt. Ed McNorton said Friday. "It's a relatively small business but they had to look through literally everything. "They found cash and drugs all over the entire building, on counters, under counters, under cash registers, in back rooms, in closets. Almost every area in the business had either cash or drugs." Now stored in the evidence room of a Windsor police station, the loose drugs are stuffed in several large freezer-style plastic bags, as is the money -- in every denomination up to $100 bills ($218,000 Canadian, $22,000 American) -- which would fill a large daypack. Officers reportedly spent five hours counting the money, even with the help of a money counter, which was seized during a raid of a local grow house and recently purchased by Windsor police from the Seized Property Management Directorate. The confiscated cash and drugs will be kept as evidence until the resulting court case ends. If there is a conviction, they may be turned over to the federal government in accordance with Canada's proceeds of crime law. "The total amount of cash is very significant and I think, needless to say, they were selling more than knick-knacks in this business," McNorton said. During the search, police said many would-be customers approached the store but were turned away. Police also seized a hatchet and two knives from behind the counter, but let the owner's pet pit bull remain behind with food and water, and the assistance of the Windsor-Essex County Humane Society. OWNER ARRESTED Harvest Moon owner Nick Minardi, 41, was arrested without incident during the raid and appeared briefly in court Friday facing charges of production of a controlled substance, as well as trafficking and possession of illegal drugs. The Crown alleges Minardi trafficked marijuana June 29, July 5 and July 8. His next scheduled court appearance is Monday. Disappointed shoppers Friday at Harvest Moon, in an older grey-stone and red-brick low-rise building at Park and Pelissier streets, were greeted with a sign reading "Puff. We're closed." Billed in neon as a "Hemp store & more," with a window-sized cannabis leaf, the five-year-old shop displays such fare as hemp products, pipes, posters and a sign saying "Deadhead parking only." A neighbour in the building, who wished not to be named, was shocked to learn that the Harvest Moon proprietor allegedly offered narcotics. "He was very personable," the neighbour said. "And he had a pretty standard clientele. There were all age groups, from 18 to 65. "And there was a whole cross-section of socio-economic backgrounds. Then there were the kids on the weekend." The neighbour said Minardi generally stuck to his advertised store hours of noon until 5:30 p.m. "There was no weird activity at night," the neighbour said. "He closed at a normal time. It seemed like a normal business." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin