Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Matthew Ramsey, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) B.C. EXPORTS GROW-OP SKILLS Marijuana-Cultivation Expertise Of B.C. Gangs Is Taking Root Around The World A different kind of brain drain is under way in B.C. as pot growers share their billions of dollars' worth of skills with a worldwide audience. "We think they're exporting their expertise," says RCMP Superintendent Paul Nadeau, director of the Mounties' national drug branch and the former head of Vancouver's drug section. "We've heard of it on an international scale." Nadeau says police counterparts in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand all report busting grow-ops with links -- either direct or indirect -- to organized crime groups operating in B.C. Ironically, enhanced border security in a post-9/11 U.S. appears to be driving the information-sharing -- and adding an unintended front to America's war on drugs. Why cross the border from Canada with a load of high-grade marijuana when you can find people willing and schooled in how to grow it for you in the U.S.? That may be the scenario that played out in a recent Washington state bust. Drug Enforcement Agency officers and police in King County took down a large grow-op ring three weeks ago, arresting seven people and seizing almost 5,000 marijuana plants worth $5 million US and more than $250,000 in cash. "Detectives believe all those houses raided are part of a large criminal organization with connections to British Columbia," said Sgt. John Urquhart of the King County sheriff's department. "This is basically the 'B.C. bud' transplanted to Washington. This is not the first time." Urquhart was reluctant to expand on the nature of the connections and the organization involved. But when Nadeau was asked who in B.C. is exporting their skills, his answer was simple: "Everybody." "Everybody [organized crime groups] is into it [marijuana production] in B.C. There's a lot of money to be made," he said. A study released by the Fraser Institute in 2006 pegged the retail value of marijuana grown in B.C. at $7 billion and estimated that there are at least 17,500 grow-ops in the province. DEA Special Agent Adam Otte noted in Seattle District Court documents that the seven Vietnamese-American suspects arrested in Washington were seen at multiple grow-op locations. "I believe they were an organized crime group of marijuana growers who helped tend their associates' grows," Otte stated. "It comes down to the business of huge profits," said Darryl Plecas, University College of the Fraser Valley criminology professor and author of the 2002 study Marihuana Operations in British Columbia. "What's happening [in Washington State] is characteristic of organized crime in general. They go wherever there's an opportunity," Plecas said. Nor should it be surprising, says Julian Sher, award-winning author of The Road to Hell: How Biker Gangs Conquered Canada. Sher points to an example of intelligence sharing in his book when he documents how a Hells Angel member acquired a recipe for the drug speed in a California jail, then promptly exported the recipe to colleagues in Australia for production. "Technology, like drugs and money, flows very quickly in the organized crime world," said Sher. "It stands to reason that B.C., where the grow-ops are the biggest cash crop, that technology flows east and south." Toronto drug cop Insp. Dan Hayes highlighted the eastward flow in an interview in 2005 when he blamed liberal sentences for convicted growers in B.C. -- and the export of pot-growing savvy for an explosion in the number of grow-ops in Toronto. "They go to college on the West Coast and then bring their expertise to Toronto," Hayes said. Nadeau said at the time that many of Ontario's illicit growers were British Columbians of Vietnamese descent who had relocated to that province to grow marijuana in order to tap into a vast and growing market of drug consumers on the U.S. East Coast. In the United Kingdom, Portsmouth University criminology professor Dr. Daniel Silverstone is researching migration patterns of Vietnamese immigrants who control a "significant" portion of marijuana production in that country to determine if domestic grow-ops in Britain have links to B.C. "It wouldn't surprise me ," Silverstone noted. "It may well have been that certain individuals do travel [from Vietnam, to Canada then to Britain]." A Thriving Industry Marijuana cultivation in B.C. is a massive industry and massive problem for citizens and police. The province accounts for 39 per cent of all cultivation cases in Canada, more than any other province. B.C.'s 79 grow-ops per 100,000 people is well over the national average of 27. The street value of B.C. bud tops $7 billion. B.C. growers produced 80,000 kilograms in 2003 and in the process stole $3.2 million in hydro power. Detection of grow-ops outpaces police forces' ability to deal with them. B.C. RCMP get about 4,500 reports of grow-ops a year, but can only bust 1,500 of the largest. -- From a 2006 Province story - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman