Pubdate: Fri, 14 Sep 2007 Source: Lindsay Daily Post (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Lindsay Daily Post Contact: http://www.thepost.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2333 Author: Jason Bain Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POT ERADICATION EFFORTS UNDERWAY An OPP helicopter takes to the sky from the Lindsay airport as a long convoy of police vehicles make their way east towards the rural recesses of the former Emily Township. Marijuana harvest season is here and it's time to haul in the crop. On this day, OPP officers - some clad in tactical gear and camouflage - would emerge from property on Colony Road just west of Settlement Road with about 75 pot plants. It was far from the only crop of narcotic-yielding plants that police would cut down this week. As of mid-afternoon Thursday, OPP officers had already seized some 15,000 plants in the City of Kawartha Lakes, said City of Kawartha Lakes OPP media relations officer Const. Mark Boileau.. At this time of year, officers use the information they have gathered throughout the year to seek out illegal crops, he said. With most grows found in large tracts of rural land, the municipality is an ideal location for growers - and one scoured by police who also use a helicopter to search out crops often easily visible from the air. Citizens can do their part to help by reporting anything out of the ordinary to police, Boileau said. Signs of a grow operation on your property could include new trails, and tools. Seeing a cube van or other mode of moving large quantities of weed would be another very obvious sign. "That's when you should start calling us," he said. Most important, is that citizens never take a situation into their own hands should they encounter suspicious activity that could be connected to a grow operation, Boileau said. Marijuana cultivation sites are often booby trapped. Local police have even arrested suspects protecting them with real weapons while wearing fake police gear. A multi-billion dollar trade, suspects will go to any extreme to protect their crop, or steal someone else's, Boileau said. "You never know what's going to happen," he said. One year earlier to the day, an armed suspect who would never be caught, fled a $5 million grow operation just a few kilometres east of where officers found marijuana plants off of Colony Road Tuesday. Police have seized everything from machine guns to assault rifles, detonator cords to blasting caps and even bullet proof vests at grow operations busted locally in recent years. Police disassembled a $10 million grow operation in North Kawartha Township already this week. In 2006, OPP destroyed over 138,993 marijuana plants and investigated or discovered 450 indoor and outdoor marijuana grow operations. More than 20,000 plants alone were seized outdoors by the Kawartha Combined Drug Forces Unit. In 2005, eradication efforts of the drug unit led to the seizure of 12,443 plants valued at over $12 million across its coverage area, which includes the City of Kawartha Lakes, Peterborough and Northumberland county's. Those numbers do not include indoor operations or those found during regular police operations. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek