Pubdate: Sat, 24 Mar 2007 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Dana Brown And Paul Legall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) LANDLORD SEES HIMSELF AS THE VICTIM Says He's The Unwitting Dupe Of A Criminal Grow Operation In His Buildings A Hamilton landlord has portrayed himself as the unwitting dupe of a sophisticated criminal operation after a massive marijuana grow operation was discovered in his east end apartments. On Wednesday, Hamilton police found 11,000 plants worth about $11 million in 48 units in three high-rise apartment buildings owned by Di Cenzo Management Inc., one of the Steel City's biggest residential landlords. It was the biggest marijuana grow operation in Hamilton history and drew attention to previous criminal activity in and around the complex, which involved at least one stabbing and a shooting. Councillor Chad Collins said the buildings have been problem spots for years and suggested the landlord should be more vigilant in screening tenants. Di Cenzo vice-president Anthony Di Cenzo took issue with Collins' remarks, suggesting he was pandering to the media. "'Di Cenzo management, by choice, started extensive repair and restoration of those buildings over the course of 2005/2006. Not at Councillor Collins' suggestion, who was expressing no concerns of which I'm aware of, during this period," he stated in an e-mail to The Spectator yesterday. He suggested he's been unfairly slammed when he is, in fact, the victim of a criminal enterprise. "If there's a witchhunt, it shouldn't be a witchhunt of the landlord," he said in a telephone interview. "In terms of victims, if there is a victim, it's the landlord." He said he has fully co-operated with the police investigation and will do regular checks of the apartment units in the future to make sure it doesn't happen again. "I believe this was a sophisticated criminal operation. Whether it's some type of organized crime, I don't know. I know a lot of thought went into it." He added the growers had done little to attract attention to themselves while growing their crops. They vented the fumes outside the building and a drug sniffing dog wasn't able to pick up the scent from the hallways. "I have personally interviewed the building superintendent, as well as some of the neighbours of the affected units," he wrote in the e-mail. "None had any hint of the possibility of a grow-op. If these types of operations are to be prevented, management and police can only do so much. Tenants need to be proactive in complaining about suspicious activities." Di Cenzo said the units where the plants were found had been rented to 48 different people. He described them as "real people" who had been individually vetted by the building management and who had undergone credit checks by a firm called Trans Union of Canada. Di Cenzo suggested there was no "commonality" in the 48 leases to suggest that these people were involved in a joint criminal enterprise. "There was nothing that raised a red flag," he said. He added police may have found something in the apartments themselves that led them from building to building and unit to unit. Sandy Shaw, senior planner for the social and research council of Hamilton, said a large number of residents in these apartments are new Canadians, many from South East Asian. She suggested they might be slow to complain about the conditions of the apartments, which are relatively affordable, or of any suspicious activities. "There's this sense that new Canadians are not entirely sure of their rights as tenants and they're not really certain what the obligation of the landlord is." She said the buildings had generated complaints in the past about mice, pigeons and heat and water problems. "It shouldn't take a massive drug bust for the neighbourhood to have the kind of attention that's been long overdue," Shaw said. In his e-mail, Di Cenzo said he had taken steps to address tenant concerns in the past, including employing security guards who patrol the buildings with drug sniffing dogs. He will also have to go through a formal eviction process for each tenant who rented the marijuana units before he can lease them again. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman