Pubdate: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 Source: Minden Times (CN ON) Copyright: 2005, OSPREY Media Group Inc Contact: http://www.mindentimes.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3720 Author: Lance Crossley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations SMALL POTATOES POT GROW-OP RAIDED BY POLICE DRUG UNITS Police seized a mom-and-pop marijuana grow-op worth more than $6,000 on Friday morning at a Livingston Lake cottage, in the northern region of Haliburton County. Members of the Kawartha Combined Forces Drug Unit discovered 178 marijuana plants along with assorted drug paraphernalia at the unattended residence. Police say they are aware of the suspect's identity and expect charges to be forthcoming. The recent shooting of four RCMP officers in Alberta has brought rural grow-ops into the national spotlight. But Detective Ernie Garbutt says it's not the small operations that are of greatest concern. "We're finding that rural organized crime grow-ops are becoming more and more prevalent," says Garbutt, who works in the drug unit. The main culprit is Asian organized crime, who truck down marijuana shipments south of the border where the market value is much higher. Drug producers can fetch up to $7,500 a pound in the states compared to only $2,500 in Ontario. "Canadian bud is the number one thing wanted right now in the States. The laws are so harsh now in the U.S., that if they can get it through from the Canadian border, all the better," says Garbutt. Police are also noticing these organizations doing straight exchanges for cocaine, which is subsequently shipped back to Ontario for distribution. Cocaine seizures around Peterborough and Lindsay have already shot up by more than 200 per cent this year compared to last. The Livingston Lake marijuana seizure is considered a small bust, but Garbutt says a county like Haliburton presents ideal settings for such operations. "The counties have secrecy. In this particular case, it was a cottage down by a lake. It was snow covered, so very few people would ever notice it driving by." Garbutt could not reveal how police discovered the Livingston operation, but says there are a number of potential indicators: anything from neighbours witnessing suspicious behaviour to hydro companies that notice unusual fluctuations in hydro use (grow-ops require much more electricity to run than normal residences). It is estimated there are as many as 20,000 growing operations in Ontario with a market value of $1 billion a year. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin