Pubdate: Thu, 13 Oct 2005 Source: Carillon, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2005 The Carillon Contact: http://www.thecarillon.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2340 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) SUNDOWN SEES LARGEST POT SEIZURE IN PROVINCE 28 People Arrested In Raid After a national headline-grabbing marijuana growing operation raid in the Sundown area early Friday, a local resident pointed out the massive drug haul has unofficially put her community on the map. "On Friday when I was quitting work (in Winnipeg) with all the chartered accountants, I could hear them saying 'Where's Sundown? Where's Sundown? Where's Sundown?' when they found out about the news," Jean Levenec described. Levenec, who is also The Carillon correspondent for Sundown, enlarged some maps for her co-workers showing the exact location of the tiny Southeast village. "After this weekend, there's no doubt in their minds as where Sundown is...actually, I think everyone knows where Sundown is now," she exclaimed during an interview Tuesday. Numerous RCMP units including local, the RCMP Drug Section and the RCMP Emergency Response Team, took down a massive Asian-run outdoor marijuana farm just outside the community in the early morning Friday. It is estimated the officers collected up to 8,000 plants in the drug bust and seized nearly 3,000 pounds of cropped marijuana found in numerous buildings on the property. The drugs would have an approximate street value of $11 million. The bust is the largest ever made in Manitoba, and the sixth in just the past two months. Police arrested 25 men and three women during the raid. RCMP spokesman Sgt. Steve Colwell said officers were able to obtain the necessary search warrant for the raid after they received substantial tips about the current use of the property. Levenec pointed out the goings-on at the property once owned by Paul and Kathy Verestiuk was suspect almost from the get-go. The Verestiuks--who owned the property for decades--sold it to farmers who were obviously not farmers. "There were animals, livestock you could see grazing, bales of hay, they were definitely farming, but for whatever reason, they lost the property. After the (Asian) family moved in, you saw none of that." However, Levenec said what makes someone stick out as bizarre in a friendly, warm-hearted area like Sundown is an absolute refusal to take part in any community fun activities. "We have winter carnivals, community suppers...they were so obviously keeping to themselves, we never saw them attend any of these community events, not one dinner," adding that the neighborly atmosphere is usually welcomed by area newcomers. But, she conceded, if concealment is what the people on the property wanted, they couldn't have picked a better location. "That was a really good spot to be secretive--it's almost completely surrounded by a wooded area." She gives her fellow Sundown residents credit for keeping all their suspicions about the strange police surveillance vehicles they had seen in the area to themselves. "It seems that the raid went off well. Everyone here knew something was about to happen, but we just let police do their thing--I'm glad it was a good pot bust." All 28 people allegedly running the marijuana operation face charges of production and possession of an illegal substance for the purpose of trafficking. Since they have not been formally charged, their names have not been released. As for the community of Sundown, Levenec felt her neighbors were maintaining a good sense of humor at the newfound notoriety they had nothing to do with. "At this point, I think most people are finding all the attention quite amusing." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom