Pubdate: Tue, 04 Apr 2006 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2006 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Janet French, Saskatchewan News Network Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) OLD SCHOOL HOME TO MARIJUANA GROW OPERATION SASKATOON -- A Mayfair man is on trial, accused of running a marijuana grow operation in an abandoned rural Saskatchewan school, the fruits of which could have netted a seller up to $120,000, according to a police drug expert. RCMP Cpl. Christopher Thomas, once a Saskatoon drug investigator and now an organized crime investigator in Ottawa, said a grow operation found in an empty school in Mayfair, 145 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon, contained enough plants to produce a minimum of 10.5 kilograms of marijuana. If the bud could stay indefinitely potent, that would be enough marijuana for a heavy user to smoke five joints a day for 22.8 years, Thomas told Saskatoon Provincial Court last month. "The amount found at this Mayfair school would not be consistent with that for personal use, just because of the sheer amount, you wouldn't be able to store the marijuana long enough to use it all," he said. Mark John Evanishen, 34, is charged with possession, production and trafficking of a controlled substance, along with firearms charges and breaching court conditions. In early March, an undercover RCMP officer, whose name is protected by a publication ban, told provincial court Judge Robert Jackson that police had received information there may have been a drug operation on the Mayfair-area farm of a man who also owned the abandoned school building. Police arranged for the installation of a device on a power pole that measured changes in electricity use at the school and observed consistently high power use between 8 p.m. and 8 a.m. daily, the officer said. Before obtaining a search warrant, police also used an infrared scanner to look for suspicious pockets of heat in the school and flew a plane over both the school and the owner's farm to look for clues. After police got a search warrant for the school, officers went into the building on Feb. 23, 2005. The undercover officer, who oversaw the investigation, said police found marijuana plants in several rooms and Evanishen alone in the building. "(Evanishen) basically said at that point the marijuana grow operation was his, that nobody else was involved, that he had a right to have it because some judge said he needed to have it for his medical condition," the officer said. Const. Mark Ochitwa, an RCMP officer with the Saskatoon integrated drug unit and the man responsible for tallying the evidence, later told the court police seized 52 small starter plants, 15 mid-sized marijuana plants, 23 vegetating -- or growing but not budding -- marijuana plants and 27 budding plants, located in four different rooms. One room also had a bed, dresser and TV. In the bedroom dresser was a shotgun loaded with two rounds and 18 rounds of loose ammunition. Under cross-examination by Evanishen's lawyer, Bill Roe, Ochitwa said police did not find any score sheets, money or plastic bags in the school -- evidence Roe suggested would be indicative of a drug trafficker. Thomas testified the school grow operation was a sophisticated one. The operator had arranged the plants in such a way to ensure continual production, he said. He or she cultivated six parent plants from which to produce clippings, dedicated another room to growing the plants larger by simulating summertime sunlight using lamps on timers, and finally, tricking a third group of plants into budding by simulating autumn light conditions. The cultivator also flanked the plants with a reflective material that helped maximize light directed at the plants. In a report on the bust, Thomas said if all the plants were put in conditions to stimulate budding, they could produce a minimum of 10.5 kg of weed. Street prices of marijuana vary based on the quantities buyers want, Thomas said. If sold by the pound, a 10.5 kg stash could bring in $60,450. If sold by the most lucrative portion, the quarter ounce, the seller could earn $120,000, he said. Roe attempted to bring doubt to Thomas's evidence by saying his calculations were based on assumptions of how well a typical plant produces, how long the plant would be potent for and the idea all plants would ultimately be forced to bud. Evanishen's lawyer also attempted to discredit the undercover officer's testimony by pointing out much of the evidence he collected leading up to his application for a search warrant of the school did not signal anything untoward. The officer agreed with Roe during cross-examination that an infrared exam of the school actually showed the east wing of the building where the grow operation was eventually found turned up cooler during the scan -- the opposite result of what one would expect if a grow operation was present. Roe had also argued any evidence gathered during the police's search of the school should be inadmissible because there was not enough evidence for a justice of the peace to have reasonably granted police a search warrant. Jackson rejected Roe's application and ruled the evidence could be used. Although the defence was to present its case Monday, Roe asked for an adjournment to obtain medical records he intends to present in his client's defence. The case will be back in court June 1. Evanishen, meanwhile, remains in custody. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom