Pubdate: Wed, 31 Aug 2005 Source: Cobourg Daily Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Northumberland Publishers Contact: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2227 Author: Pete Fisher SEIZED POT WORTH $14-MILLION Police officers raided a rural farm north of Havelock on Tuesday and seized someone's field of dreams -- more than 14,000 marijuana plants with a street value of $14-million. Detective Sergeant Dean Steinke of the Kawartha Combined Forces Drug Unit said it is the largest seizure this year for the unit , which is made up of members from the Drug Enforcement Section of the OPP, Rural Agricultural Crime Team (OPP), Peterborough OPP, Peterborough/Lakefield Police and the Port Hope Police Service. The property had been used exclusively for farming marijuana. "We're looking at 10 to 20 acres of marijuana; a trenched-out irrigation system, very rugged, very rough terrain," Det. Sgt. Steinke said. "This land hasn't been farmed in years." The farmhouse is located approximately 10 minutes north of Havelock off County Road 46 on the dead-end Anderson Road. The fields were accessible with all-terrain vehicles. A trailer was used to bring the plants out of the field for loading on to a large truck. Apart from this find, Det. Sgt. Steinke said growers in the province seem to be moving farther north. "Our partners between North Bay and Timmins are inundated with drug grows," he said. "We hit them so hard here in the last three years, the KCFDU and all the police agencies have been hammering down on these grows -- coupled with community input." He also said he is frustrated that Canada's legal system isn't more effective at curtailing growers' activities. "Compared to the United States, there is very little deterrent," he said."The maximum (sentence) for marijuana production is seven years and we have yet to see anyone get seven years." Because of the light penalties and huge profits, Det. Sgt. Steinke said, there is no way growers are going to stop. "We know that our marijuana in Ontario and Canada is mostly for export to the United States, and what comes back is cocaine," he said. "And that's a real problem we have with young people. If you take all the marijuana that we have traced that has gone south, and all the cocaine that has come north, and you look at the violence and the gang wars that are going on in and around the province -- the shootings, the killings, the deaths: it all has to do with one thing and that's drugs." Another startling statistic is the number of weapons found when police seize drugs like marijuana. "Our seizures of weapons, especially firearms, has gone up over 100 per cent," Det. Sgt. Steinke said. He believes more guns are used because there is so much competition in the market. "Growers are actually protecting themselves from other people ripping them off," he said. In Bancroft, where police seized 40,000 plants, the suspects were living in foxholes, he added. Although no arrests were made on Tuesday, police say they do know who the suspects are. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek