Pubdate: Fri, 04 Aug 2006 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Steve Buist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) POLICE GROWING THEIR POT BUSTS Rich neighbourhood or poor, on the Mountain or below it, Stoney Creek to Ancaster, it matters little. Somewhere close to you, Hamilton police have found a marijuana grow operation at one time or another. "It's all over," said Superintendent Glyn Wide of the Hamilton Police Service. "There's no one part." So far this year, Hamilton police have seized over $6 million worth of marijuana from grow operations and executed about 50 search warrants for marijuana -- an average of about two per week. And it might surprise Hamilton residents to learn that marijuana grow houses can frequently be found in suburban, well-to-do neighbourhoods. Twenty years or more ago, said Wide, growing marijuana was a less sophisticated pursuit that might have involved a flower pot or two on a window ledge out of sight. "But with the proliferation of drugs coming from British Columbia, it began to become more organized," he added. Now, individuals or organized groups will rent houses and turn them into indoor farms by cutting into the electrical supply to avoid the meter and finding creative ways to vent the excessive heat generated from intense lighting to the outdoors. "You'll have one person who's the farmer who's paid by someone higher in the organization to go from house to house to house to check on the operations and make sure everything's running smoothly," said Wide. "They will use every room available," he added. "They don't care because it's not their house. Who cares about mould or spores in the house or contamination in the air." The goal is to get the plants harvested and skip off to a new location before suspicions are raised in the neighbourhood. Then the cycle starts anew. The stakes are lucrative. One large plant can provide about $1,000 worth of marijuana, and a typical grow house might have hundreds of plants. "If you've got 200 plants, you've got $200,000 possibly," said Wide. Once police have received a tip about a possible grow house, they can use an infrared device to produce an image of the house that can then be put forward to help obtain a search warrant. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake