Pubdate: Wed, 13 Jul 2005 Source: Orillia Today (CN ON) Copyright: 2005, Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/sc/orillia/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1508 Author: Frank Matys POT PANEL OPP At U.S. Summit The U.S. war on drugs is getting a helping hand from a Canadian well versed in the grow ops and cross-border smuggling that are feeding America's hunger for pot. Police and customs officials gathered in Michigan this week to learn more about the indoor farms that are springing up around Ontario and other provinces with alarming regularity, and how those operations are nourishing the expansive drug market south of the border. Answering their questions was Det. Staff Sgt. Rick Barnum, an Orillia-based veteran of the OPP's anti-drug operations, and a man intimately familiar with the booming business that is the marijuana industry. "It is extremely well organized," he told Orillia Today shortly before heading off for the one-day conference. According to Barnum, Canada boasts the dubious distinction of supplying more marijuana to the lucrative U.S. market than nearly any other country, ranking second only to Mexico in annual exports of the illicit weed. From suburban basements outfitted with crude lighting systems to sophisticated operations like the one discovered inside Barrie's former Molson brewery, so-called grow ops are responsible for a large portion of the pot being inhaled below the 49th parallel. "We supply more marijuana to the United States than the United States does," Barnum said. Much of it passes undetected through U.S. customs, the valuable buds packaged in one-pound bricks that are stowed along with legitimate cargo inside tractor trailers whose drivers are paid handsomely for the risky trip. A typical delivery can weigh as much as 2,000 lbs and fetch millions of dollars on the street. Barnum believes the rising popularity of indoor grow operations in Canada is the product of an overly lenient justice system that does little to discourage large-scale producers, who have come to view it as a relatively low-risk proposition. In contrast, growers in the U.S. who are nabbed with 99 plants or more face a minimum five-year jail sentence, with penalties for pot production rising dramatically depending on the amount seized. Much to the frustration of drug agents working this side of the border, Canadian judges can hand out jail terms of up to seven years, but rarely do, Barnum said. "If they get caught here, nine times out of 10, it is a conditional sentence," he said. A recent promise of stiffer sentences for dealers and growers - announced as part of a larger drug strategy that would also decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot - will have little impact unless the courts get on board, he said. "Just apply the laws that already exist," was his advice. Based out of OPP Headquarters in Orillia, Barnum oversees drug enforcement for the Huronia Region, Toronto and Peterborough. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek