Pubdate: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 Source: Bancroft This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2005, OSPREY Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.bancroftthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3853 Author: Rosanne Van Vierzen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DRUG INVESTIGATION OF MAYNOOTH GROW OP LEADS TO DEPORTATION One of the men who was busted by Project Longarm in September for his involvement in a marijuana grow operation in Maynooth, Ont. will be removed from Canada, a Bancroft court heard Tuesday morning. Markham's Boon Heng Tay, 38, who has been in custody since mid-September, pled guilty to charges of possession for the purpose of trafficking and production of a controlled substance. Tay was arrested Sept. 13 along with two other men from Toronto and Scarborough. Tay was said to be acting as a waterboy in the operation. The court heard how Project Longarm, with the assistance of the OPP emergency response unit and the Bancroft OPP, was about to execute a warrant at a rural property near Maynooth when two large cube vans left the property. According to police, officers followed the vans to a business front in York Region where they watched large bags being unloaded and carried into the front door of the business. One of the trucks then returned to the Maynooth area, where two men were seen bagging and loading marijuana into the truck. The three men were arrested and officers seized about 4,000 plants from the back of the truck, as well as 550 plants still growing in the back of the field. Also seized were three vehicles and an above ground swimming pool, which were being used in the production. As a result of information from Project Longarm, York Regional Police also executed a warrant at the business in York Region, where they found 5,500 marijuana plants drying in the back of the store as well as 123 plants upstairs. The estimated combined street value of the seizure from Hastings County and York region is 9.1 million. Prosecutors consider this a relatively substantial grow operation, said Judge Geoff Griffin in court on Tuesday. He said he considers the three months Tay has already spent in a Canadian penitentiary awaiting trial to be a harsh type of sentence as Tay is new to the country and doesn't speak English. I would consider being by yourself in a foreign country for three months to be extremely difficult, he said. Griffin also made note of the looming election and Conservative Stephen Harper's wish to crack down with harsher penalties on people convicted on involvement in grow operations. Tay was ordered deported back to his home country of Malaysia by the new year and is prohibited from having any firearms or explosives while in Canada. The other two men arrested in connection with the September bust were also present. Kit Keung Ng, 37 of Toronto and Edmund Che Kin Ho, 43 or Scarborough, Ont. were deferred to a later date in January 24 at 9:30 a.m. so they could obtain appropriate counsel.