Pubdate: Fri, 25 Mar 2005 Source: Annex Guardian (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/annex/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2316 Author: Bernie O'Neill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/jim+karygiannis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/mike+del+grande LET'S HOPE CRIME FIGHTERS DON'T GO UP IN SMOKE You might call it reefer madness, but I'm starting to wonder if there may be something positive that will come out of the two politicians going door to door in their area, in search of marijuana grow houses. There's a bumper crop of examples of crime-fighting duos in the movies, literature and on TV. Often they're our heroes. Just think of Sherlock Holmes and Watson, or Starsky and Hutch, Freebie and the Bean, or Clint Eastwood and Clyde, the orangutan. So why not two real-life heroes right here, who might even spur on their own Canadian TV show? (It couldn't be any worse than what's on TV right now.) Just imagine an announcer with a deep voice reading the intro over funky guitar riffs... "They're brave, they're brash and they have a nose that knows where the marijuana grows. They are Councillor Mike del Grande and MP Jim Karygiannis, but people in the 'hood call them Huff and Puff. Why? Because they'll huff, and they'll puff and they'll bloooow your marijuana grow house down! They don't care if there's no pigs around. They're looking after this problem their own way, in their own time." (Guitar: wahowahowahowowow...) Even though the show could illuminate us on the dangers of having marijuana farmers as people in our neighbourhood, there'd also be some opportunities in each script for lighter moments. Like Mike Del Grande or Jim Karygiannis (a.k.a. Huff and Puff, also known as M.D.G. and Jimmy K.) at a family's door around the supper hour arresting some 12-year-old kid who says, "What do mean I'm 'busted'. This is broccoli!" Or the two of them tailing a potato chip truck to its next destination, which turns out to be a grocery store, where the duo mistakenly puts the cuffs on the cashier in the plants section. Or hiding in the bushes on a stakeout, in mid-winter, as no one goes to an abandoned house they suspect is a grow-op, day after day after day. They're finally brought to emergency, frozen as stiff as a couple of Mel's moose, their feet in the air, binoculars stuck to their eye sockets. The emergency room nurse says, "Not you two #$%&&+#s again!" So there's three episodes right there. Personally, I admire politicians who don't sit around and do nothing. So I give them credit for that. I really do. I just think anyone going around knocking on doors looking for grow-ops might get themselves snuffed out. Which would be an awful thing to happen and would also necessitate two byelections, and we all know how costly and moronic a process that can be. Certainly they are more brave than I am. If I happened upon a grow house with someone inside, with my quick thinking in moments of crisis, I'd essentially freeze, and then get kidnapped, robbed, or shot. They'd tie me up and shove hash brownies down my throat, then dangle munchies in front of my face for two hours until I finally broke down and told them everything I know. Which is not very much. What I find surprising about these two, though, especially in the case of Karygiannis, is that he is a member of the ruling Liberal party, in other words the federal government that makes the laws. If tougher measures for grow-op operators are in order, all his party has to do is implement them. In Del Grande's case, if the city wanted to create a large police task force to tackle grow-ops, they could do that, too. That's where things need to happen, at city hall. The fact that they're going door to door (Knock, knock: "Um, excuse me, are you growing hundreds of pot plants in this house, which will be worth thousands if not millions when sold on the street? Because you know that's illegal, eh? You're not? Are you sure?") is almost an admission that government is useless in helping solve this problem and that the only way to bust a grow-op is to figure out where it is and call the police. There's got to be a better way. Meanwhile, the new federal approach to all this is a mess, in my opinion, making possession of pot less of a legal problem, but growing it more of one. They're just upping the demand, while trying to cut off the supply, making it even more lucrative for someone to take that risk and grow pot for profit. So yet another house is filled with criminals, guns, booby traps, and rigged electrical wiring. Makes you wonder what they've been smoking up there in Ottawa. Must be some good stuff. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin