Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jun 2006 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsor/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Doug Schmidt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) 'HARSH' PENALTY FOR GROW HOUSE DEALER A Windsor Superior Court judge said he is putting drug traffickers on notice that incarceration will be the price for anyone setting up marijuana grow houses in residential areas. "Jail ... is a definite deterrent," Justice Joseph Quinn said Friday in sentencing Trung Kien Ha to 18 months in prison for converting a South Windsor home into a "sophisticated grow operation" with a bypassed hydro meter. Crown attorney Richard Pollock, who had argued for a 21-month jail term, said it was one of the harshest sentences ever meted out locally for such an offence to a perpetrator with an otherwise spotless record. Defence lawyer Mark Kramer had sought a sentence of house arrest for the 34-year-old father of two young daughters. Ha was convicted following a six-day trial in March for his connection to the largest marijuana bust in the city's history, when police raided 11 homes and apartments in June 2004. Seven people were arrested and police seized an estimated $5.5 million in pot, $10,000 in cash and growing equipment worth approximately $100,000. Ha was fingered as the principal culprit behind a 480-plant grow in a home owned by his father in the 3900-block of Acorn Crescent. A marijuana production and trafficking trial targeting his mother and another relative -- involving two other grow houses -- starts June 26, while a third court action involving more homes converted to grow houses commences Sept. 11, with Ha's brother and wife being the accused. While all those arrested in the co-ordinated raids two years ago are related by blood or marriage, the prosecution has split up the legal actions in order to simplify the process. Quinn said he could only take the Acorn Crescent facts into account in sentencing Ha. Ha was given concurrent 18-month sentences for separate production and trafficking convictions, as well as a three-month concurrent term for theft of hydro. After his jail time, Ha will be put on probation for eight months and be prohibited from possessing weapons for 10 years. The judge said Ha was never able to explain how he owned houses in Toronto and LaSalle and was able to pay $40,000 for a Honda Odyssey just months before his 2004 arrest, despite not having worked since 2001. Another "troubling factor," said Quinn, was that Ha expressed no remorse for his crime. Quinn ordered Ha to repay Enwin Utilities $7,282.04 in restitution for stolen power. The judge expressed concern with the "flourishing" number of grow ops in Essex County but said offering jail time will have the perpetrators "weighing the consequences" more of getting caught. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman