Pubdate: Wed, 07 Sep 2005 Source: Sun Times, The (Owen Sound, CN ON) Copyright: 2005, Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1544 Author: Scott Dunn Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n642/a10.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) $7-MILLION POT BUST OPP commander also sounds off about recent court ruling which he said 'rocked our world' Grey County OPP officers seized hundreds of kilograms of marijuana worth about $7 million which they found stuffed in two vans at a drunk-driving spot check in Flesherton about 2:30 a.m Tuesday. Police issued a warning a couple hours later for people to avoid hitchhikers, ensure their homes and vehicles are secure and report any suspicious activity because the person or people in one of the vans got away. They had not been caught by late Tuesday afternoon. Police had no descriptions to go on. Police showed off 39 jumbo-sized garbage bags full of fresh, rank smelling marijuana plants. Two rented Dodge Caravans, one silver and the other red, had been filled with the drugs, which weighed 694.5 kilograms (1,562 pounds), police said at a noon hour news briefing at the Grey County OPP detachment in Chatsworth. Insp. Mark Van Landuyt said he will be recommending commendations for the officers, who had just begun conducting RIDE checks at the intersection of Grey Rd. 4 and Highway 10 in Flesherton when the eastbound vans approached. Van Landuyt, the detachment commander, also took the opportunity of the media briefing to sound off about a recent judge's ruling which he said "rocked our world." He was referring to Justice Julia Morneau's decision in July to throw out evidence in a similar case where police discovered $400,000 worth of marijuana in two vehicles. She ruled the evidence was inadmissible because police had no legal authority to stop the cars. She found they stopped the cars on the pretext of a drunk-driving check, but there was no evidence the officers asked about drinking. That violated the men's constitutional rights and so the case was dismissed. Morneau was particularly critical of one officer's testimony that he stops virtually every car he sees late at night, especially after 3 a.m. on weekends. Van Landuyt said he thinks drivers in both cases were stopped legally and stressed "the importance of the police officers' need and legal authority to stop motor vehicles." He said the court ruling "was inconsistent with the beliefs of law enforcement, the understanding of law enforcement and the intention of the law." He raised a question about why drug busts have become "all too common" locally. "Have the recent court decisions painted an open invitation to drug traffickers to produce their product in Grey and Bruce counties? They certainly haven't been a deterrent." He said the majority of major drug busts in this area involve someone from outside the area. Const. Jim Hunter ran the RIDE check Tuesday morning. He told reporters at the news briefing the silver van stopped ahead of the spot check. Twice he motioned for the driver to approach, but the van didn't move. He approached the van, smelled marijuana and saw drug-growing equipment inside. The two men inside looked "very nervous," he said. Meanwhile, the red van drove behind a grocery store and Hunter directed his partner, Const. Paul Nixon, to check it out. The driver and whoever else, if anyone, in the vehicle ran off. Police couldn't find them despite efforts of a police tracking dog they called in. Police got a search warrant before checking the interior of the vans, which later were parked behind the police detachment and displayed with the bags of marijuana and electric fans for reporters to see. Hunter said he recognized the marijuana was grown outside. Sr. Const. Steve Starr said police don't yet know exactly where it was grown and he hoped people who recognized the vans would contact police or call an anonymous tips into Crime Stoppers. Hunter told reporters he didn't receive a tip that drugs were being transported that night but it's not uncommon for drugs to be shipped at that time of day. Van Landuyt said the recent court decision has been demoralizing for his officers who, he says, are questioning their role. "We as police officers, in order to protect and preserve the peace, are being questioned and accused of operating unlawfully. The question is why do we bother? It's fortunate the Grey County detachment have officers with high morals and excellent work ethic." He said officers are asking "why do they risk their safety and their lives for a system that does not appear to be operating on the same page?" Shui Kwong Ho, 37, and Jie-Xing Chen, 34, both of Scarborough, are each charged with possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. Ho was charged also with three counts of failing to comply with release conditions. Both were in custody and were to appear in bail court this morning. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin