Pubdate: Fri, 04 Mar 2005 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Lindsay Kines Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) AG WARNS OF VIOLENCE RELATED TO GROW-OPS The deaths of four RCMP officers in Alberta Wednesday should dispel any doubts people might have about the dangerous nature of marijuana grow-operations that plague B.C., Attorney General Geoff Plant said Thursday. "I think there is an attitude that is part of our culture in British Columbia that thinks that a grow-op is just your neighbour making a couple of bags of marijuana for some of his friends," Plant said in an interview. "Whether that was ever true -- 20 or 30 years ago -- it's sure not true today. "We're talking about the commercial manufacture of marijuana for the purpose of participating in an international organized-crime activity. That's very serious business." Victoria Police Chief Paul Battershill, whose partner was killed in a police raid in Vancouver in 1987, said investigators increasingly find grow-operations that are either fortified, booby-trapped, or guarded by people with weapons. "I think, in some respects, people think of grows as mom-and-pop operations," he said. "Certainly, when I was on an ERT (emergency response team), we were encountering grows that were protected by people with weapons. Obviously that trend is increasing." Battershill said he has seen reports pegging the number of marijuana grow-operations in B.C. at 9,000 to 10,000. "I think we'd be in range of a 1,000 grows on the Island," he said. Police, however, have a difficult time controlling the problem because the courts hand out such light sentences, Battershill said. The Vancouver Sun reported earlier this year that fewer than one in seven people convicted of growing marijuana in B.C. over the past two years was sentenced to any time in jail. "The sentences given out in B.C. are ridiculously low for grow-ops," Battershill said. "I think that grow-ops that are either booby-trapped or guarded by persons with weapons or barricaded should receive a considerably higher sentence. That should be a separate category." Plant said B.C. has been urging the federal government to push ahead with its plan to double sentences. "We've been trying to help send a message that this is serious, because it was serious yesterday, it's obviously serious today, and it will still be serious tomorrow. "We're talking about something that has been the blight of our neighbourhoods. It is a serious law enforcement problem. It has also, I think, been a problem in terms of public confidence in the administration of justice because the public doesn't understand why sentencing isn't serious for something they think is serious." Battershill said news of the Edmonton shootings took him back to the day his partner, Vancouver police Sgt. Larry Young, was shot and killed by a drug dealer during an ERT raid. The killer had been listening to a police scanner prior to the raid. "As a former tactical officer," Battershill said, "I can tell you, without even looking at it, there was nothing those people could have done to protect themselves if they were ambushed." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth