Pubdate: Mon, 11 Sep 2006
Source: Drayton Valley Western Review (CN AB)
Copyright: 2006 Bowes Publishers Limited
Contact: http://www.draytonvalleywesternreview.com/contact.php
Website: http://www.draytonvalleywesternreview.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/980
Author: Nick Conrad
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

GROW OPS CAN CROP UP ANYWHERE

Local Drayton Valley residents and RCMP were on hand  at the curling
club to hear an Edmonton RCMP Green Team  officer share some
first-hand knowledge of marijuana  grow-ops.

Const. Ian Gillan, a near 20-year veteran who has gone  undercover for
drug raids and even bought meth and  crack-cocaine in Drayton Valley,
taught how to spot the  telltale signs of a grow-op and the effects
they have  on people and communities.

"They are the economic engine of organized crime,"  Gillan said about
grow-ops adding that, just the night  before, they had busted four
operations in Edmonton.

Gillan said he doesn't preach on the morality of  marijuana use but
based on his experience, all hard  drug users started out with
marijuana or alcohol.

"I believe 100 per cent it is a gateway drug," he said  while
recognizing its prevalent use. "Our best guess  isapproximately 25 to
30 per cent of the population  you could sell marijuana to."

He added that marijuana has increased in potency over  the years. In
the seventies, marijuana coming from  Mexico would have around four
per cent THC, the  hallucinogenic ingredient in marijuana. Nowadays,
THC  content can be anywhere from 12 to 18 per cent with new  growing
methods like aeroponics, a technique pioneered  for growing plants in
space.

Gillan and his team have busted grow-ops on personal  farms, upscale
houses and even in commercial buildings.  He said they found an
operation running out of a  warehouse in the middle of downtown
Edmonton next to  Grant MacEwan College. One expensive house that
contained a grow-op had a koi pond and a rock garden in  the yard.

Real estate agent Heather Malin came to the seminar to  learn about
the effects indoor grow-ops have on houses.

"It's very important in our industry that we serve the  public
properly with selling homes," Malin said, adding  she was shocked to
learn how common products can be  made into illegal drugs.

Gillan said often houses used for indoor grow-ops go  undetected and
then are put back on the market as the  drug-growers move on to a new
spot. They slap a coat of  paint over mildew infested walls and
shoddily patch up  cracked foundation for the next person to deal with.

The growers "fake nature in their basement" by giving  plants 12 hours
of lamp light then 12 hours of dark to  simulate spring. Then they
adjust light time  accordingly to simulate summer and fall to induce
the  plant to flower. Because carbon dioxide feeds the  plants, the
growers flood the rooms with the gas making  the house a major health
risk for anyone in the  vicinity. Add in the moisture from the
hydroponic  setups commonly used and you get a mildew infested  mess.
And it's not hard for them to stock up on  supplies, either.

"You can go on the Internet and buy any of this stuff,"  Gillian said.
"It's all available."
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MAP posted-by: Derek