Pubdate: Mon, 06 Mar 2006 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Jane Sims, Free Press Justice Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DEADLY THREAT POSED BY WIRED GROW OP Live wires wrapped around the front door knob and lock. Ditto for the main floor windows and patio door. Knives at the ready, next to a mattress on a bedroom floor. Hundreds of marijuana plants growing inside, with a video security system -- and more -- to keep outsiders out. A London court heard a litany of horrors about an illegal marijuana grow operation stashed inside a bungalow that police raided last June. Heavily booby trapped to fend off intruders, the house at 259 Commissioners Rd. W. was so fortified, experts were taken aback by its defences. "This was nothing short of a trap," said federal drug prosecutor Bill Buchner, who called it "meticulously thought out." London Hydro line supervisor Tony Casciano, called in to assess the wiring, said the situation was "very dangerous." Touching doors or windows would have led to "a pretty good jolt," causing injury and possibly death, he said. London police Const. Darrin Brown, formerly of the force's drug squad, said he'd never seen anything like it. "This is my first experience with a house wired up or booby trapped," he testified. Revelations about the grow operation emerged as a man hired to guard the house pleaded guilty to a raft of charges, including a rare count of permitting a trap device with electricity. Ngoc Tuan Vu, 25, a Vietnamese immigrant, also pleased guilty to marijuana production and possession for the purpose of trafficking and theft of electricity. Vu told Superior Court Justice Lynda Templeton he took the job a friend offered because he needed money for a brother studying in France. "I know it was my fault. I am responsible for what I did," Vu said in the prisoner's box through a translator. He is to be sentenced today. A pre-sentence report showed when Vu took the job, he believed there was little risk of being jailed if caught. Conditional sentences, or those served outside jail, have been handed down for illegal pot grow operations as big or larger than the London one. Buchner asked Templeton to consider a sentence of 2 1/2 to three years. Defence lawyer Jack Hardy said Vu's 267 days spent in pre-plea custody is the equivalent of an almost 18-month sentence and is enough. Neither Buchner nor Hardy could find a case with similar facts involving a booby trap. Brown told Templeton the police officers went into the residence just before 7 a.m. after getting a search warrant. Neighbours told them everyone entered the house through an east door off the car port. On the door was a sign that read: "Please Use Front Door." The east door was the only entrance not electrified. But it was rigged to close a kitchen door when it was opened. Vu, confronted by police in bullet-proof vests, helmets and guns drawn, quickly surrendered, Brown said. A total of 434 pot plants were found in the bedroom and basement, plus a large amount of grow equipment. A security camera, part of a system to watch the front of the house, was also found. There was also an electrical bypass in place -- getting around the normal power meter -- to operate the place. Blue wires on the windows and front door were jammed into live sockets. Brown listed the dangers of grow ops in residential areas -- noxious fumes, mould and fungus and risk of fire from crude electrical bypasses. Casciano couldn't say how much power would have been flowing through the wires. Hardy disagreed with Buchner's estimates the plants had a street value of about $135,000, or $300,000 if sold in grams. Vu, Hardy said, came to Canada on a student visa in 2000 and married in 2002. He has a step-daughter and is a landed immigrant. He said his client, with no prior criminal record, wants to be reunited with his wife and live in the London area, where he says he can get a job. Hardy said Vu wasn't involved in the operation long and didn't set the traps. Vu said in a pre-sentence report he was "sorry and scared to be in jail." He has limited English and Hardy argued "the experience in jail is more severe because of the language barrier." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom