Pubdate: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 Source: Burnaby Now, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.burnabynow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1592 Author: Mia Thomas, staff reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) I DON'T THINK IT'S A HARMLESS CRIME Fire. Gunfights. Families in the line of fire. Wendy Jenkinson envisioned all these possibilities in her North Burnaby neighbourhood when she discovered a man had set up a marijuana growing operation behind her home. "I'm trying not to get angry. I'm trying not to get overwrought. But maybe you have to," said Jenkinson. "It's the danger, because I don't think these are 'mom and pop' operations. It's all controlled by gangs, of all stripes. "I don't think it's a harmless crime. These are not nice people. This is not me with my tomatoes." Jenkinson said she was furious that the man "would put neighbours that I love and trust in danger." She describes the community where she's lived since January 1987 as a little slice of Canadiana. "We're a typical, what I would like to think of, neighbourhood," Jenkinson said, explaining there are people with backgrounds from around the world. "We've always been this real mix of people, which I love. It's very friendly." After her husband died a little more than two years ago, her neighbours rallied around because she had no other family nearby. "They've been great with me. I have a great support system here. So I don't like it when something like that happens." There's not much the retired woman misses - she's frank about her interest in the neighbourhood's goings-on. "When I'm on the phone, I lift up the curtain and I look out," Jenkinson said emphatically. "I make no subterfuge - I look out. That's what I do." Sometimes she'll wave at a neighbour or invite a friend in for coffee and a chat - it's that old-fashioned, extended-family type of community. In May or June last year, a man moved into the house that backed onto hers. "He led us to believe he was the owner," Jenkinson said. The man also talked of a wife and two sons, one still in school, the other grown up - but she never saw them. As with all the other neighbours, he was welcomed. "He would talk to us and I would talk to him," Jenkinson said. "I didn't know anything (was going on)." After the first week, no one else in the neighbourhood saw anyone other than the man, who'd introduced himself as "Michael." A mattress and a box spring arrived early on, but there were no other indications anyone was moving in. "We never saw a furniture van," Jenkinson said. She wasn't immediately suspicious, however, because she doesn't live by the kitchen window. "I see a lot, but I'm not here all the time. In retrospect, there were some signs something odd was going on - but nothing extremely obvious. "He pretty well had the blinds down, but a lot of people have their blinds down," Jenkinson said. The mail slot had been closed up and a mail box added. None of these things were unusual in a security-conscious home, but still, the neighbours wondered. "We kept laughingly calling it a grow op. We knew there was something silly going on." When she saw three "thug-like" characters hanging out around her new neighbour's home, Jenkinson told Michael and suggested he call the police. But he didn't agree and instead asked her, if she saw them again, to not call the police but contact him at work instead. When she noticed someone loitering around the home shortly after, Jenkinson called Michael, who asked her to go out and chase them away herself instead of calling the police - something she declined to do. Burnaby RCMP's Green Team - the anti-marijuana grow operation division - raided the home in mid-December and arrested the man, but it wasn't long before he was back in the home. "I was so amazed that he was able to come back and carry on like nothing had happened," said Jenkinson, who saw him there a few times. But it was a strong indicator for Jenkinson that the homeowner knew about the grow op. "If I was an owner and discovered there'd been a grow op, the place would be boarded up." She was stunned, however, when the man - whose electricity had been cut off because of the grow op - was wandering around the neighbourhood recently, extension cord in hand, looking for somewhere to plug it in. "He just wasn't getting it," Jenkinson said. "He just wasn't getting it. "I'm sure that if (the opportunity of) tending plants in another home comes along, he'll take it," she said. She contacted the community police office to find out what could be done and didn't get a response, and she had problems finding someone at any level of government who could help her. For Jenkinson, it wasn't an issue of the legal, moral or other aspects of using marijuana - it was all about the growers who put her neighbourhood in danger for their profit. She says she realizes that, in the bigger scheme of things, a grow op barely registers. But in her neighbourhood, as in many other neighbourhoods in the city, the region and the province, it became their problem - something no one seemed to understand. "There are more horrendous things going on," Jenkinson said. "But everybody gave me so little and left me hanging as to what would happen. "I was a little frustrated by it. Somewhere along the line, somebody has a duty to make the community feel safe." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth