Pubdate: Sat, 05 Mar 2005 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2005, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Michele Mandel, Toronto Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) NO RISKS FOR POT OF GOLD Our Lax Grow-Op Laws Need to Be Fixed Now, Michele Mandel Says FOR SO LONG, it was billed as a victimless crime. But not anymore. Not ever again. Not when four junior Mounties lie dead, their young lives cut short outside a remote Alberta marijuana grow operation, their blood spilled trying to eradicate what the RCMP commissioner calls a "plague" on society. Peter Christopher Schiemann, 25, Anthony Fitzgerald Orion Gordon, 28, Lionide Nicholas Johnston, 34, and Brock Warren Myrol, 29. In their honour, surely we have a duty now to finally take this scourge more seriously. For so long now, the proliferation of marijuana grow-ops has been a story we've read and seen often on the nightly news, so common these days that we scarcely pay attention anymore. Yet another suburban home ripped apart and turned into a pot factory. Yet another arrest. Almost every neighbourhood has had one. Ours was just a few doors down in a rented home occupied by a boy who liked to come over and play -- but who never invited my children back to his house. Then one day, the child and his family were gone and we understood why there were no reciprocal play dates: His parents had been hiding an indoor jungle of pot. Seemed Harmless It seemed harmless at the time, but no longer. We've all since learned of the dangers of these grow-ops going up in flames because of illegal rewiring, the toxic gases they pump into the neighbourhood and now the deadly hazards that may await the police who try to bring them down. These are not harmless mom-and-pop operations, we should know that by now; most are commercial marijuana branch plants of a multibillion-dollar business run by gangs, bikers and others not afraid to use violence to protect their very lucrative pot of gold. With illegal growers able to rake in $1 million a year in profit, this is big business, big money. To keep it out of the hands of competitors and police, these cannabis criminals will wire their grow houses with electrical booby traps, arm their crop sitters with guns and move some of their operations into the country where they will be far less conspicuous. And now we know they will even execute police officers. James Roszko probably imagined that the Mounties he hated so much would never discover the secret crop he was farming in rural Alberta. So much goes undiscovered. Canada produces between 960 and 2,400 tonnes of marijuana a year, much of it for export to the United States, where it is traded for cocaine and guns. Annual seizures of marijuana plants have increased sixfold since 1993, but police admit they are still not making a dent. "The risk is low, the profit is high, deterrence is not there, so it makes it an attractive proposition," Chief Supt. Raf Souccar, the RCMP's director-general of drugs and organized crime, told reporters last year. Canada's laws are so lax and sentences so lenient that few growers ever go to jail. They face a maximum seven-year term under the old law and while new legislation would double that for growers of 50 plants or more, few expect judges to impose anything nearly so stiff. Police agencies across the country have long called on Ottawa to impose mandatory minimum sentences of five to seven years to deter these pot barons. Not Convinced Yet even now, in the bloody wake of Canada's deadliest police massacre in more than a century, our politicians are not convinced. In this case, there are so many questions still unanswered. Roszko, described by his own father as a "wicked devil," was not likely part of any organized crime group. Growing weed was an easy, lucrative and virtually risk-free endeavour for a violent, disturbed man often on the wrong side of the law. The most tragic part of this story is that the four fallen Mounties were killed when Roszko really had nothing to fear from them. With our lenient judges, there's little doubt that all he would have faced was a fine. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake