Pubdate: Fri, 10 Aug 2007 Source: Mississauga News (CN ON) Copyright: The Mississauga News 2007 Contact: http://www.mississauganews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/268 Author: Louie Rosella Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) MARIJUANA MAYHEM Not Much Science, Just Lots Of Danger, In Grow Labs They're everywhere. Whether it's a new townhouse development, a run-down apartment complex or a luxury home in an up-scale neighbourhood, marijuana growing laboratories, (or marijuana grow labs, as they've come to be called), continue to appear at an alarming rate in Peel. Just ask prominent public figures such as Peel Regional Police Deputy Chief Paul Tetzlaff or Brampton West-Mississauga MPP Vic Dhillon. Both live on respectable, unsuspecting streets. Both were shocked to learn what was happening in their neighbourhood recently. Suspicious melting "I noticed in March the snow melting on a house right next to mine and I was rather suspicious as to why this was happening," said Dhillon. "There was no melting of snow outside my home. I phoned police and...before I could make it to my office, my wife was calling me telling me they were pulling out hundreds of marijuana plants." Tetzlaff had a similar scenario back in May of 2006. "I looked out the back window one day after my wife said 'what are all the police cars doing on our street,' and they were dismantling a marijuana grow lab three doors down," he said. The proliferation of these home grown labs prompted the police force to form a "Green Team," back in 2000. The five-officer team is dedicated to taking down these multi-million dollar, homegrown marijuana operations. In 2006, the drug squad took down 95 marijuana labs, seizing more than $68 million worth of drugs. This year, 35 have been dismantled, 13 of which have been in Mississauga, with a street value of $14 million. While statistics show the number of grow labs police are dismantling is on the decline, investigators say it's difficult to gauge the effectiveness of their efforts. Better at concealing "They may be concealing them a little better," said Det. Sgt. Rob Ryan, who directs the Green Team. "They keep the plants in the basement, vent the house better, cut the lawn, live in it and maintain it better. "People are getting smarter. They are moving out of certain areas and jurisdictions and going elsewhere. I like to believe that, because of our policing, ( raiding ) them continually, it's had an effect on the overall viability of having ( a grow lab )," he said. Ryan said there are numerous dangers to the public regarding grow labs. The intense heat and lighting used increases the chances of a fire, and also creates mould, making the home a health hazard for future homeowners and their families. By-passing the electricity, as growers often do, can make the ground outside live and hazardous. During a recent raid, Ryan said, he came across a toddler in the home that "was walking right by these transformers," being used to grow marijuana. He could have easily been electrocuted, Ryan said. While real estate agents must, if they have knowledge of the home formerly being a grow lab, disclose that information to a potential buyer, there is no law stating agents must find out whether a home used to be a drug house, Ryan said. Police are working with the Region of Peel to develop a section on the Region's website indicating which addresses have been used as marijuana labs over the past five years, Ryan said. In the meantime, there are several signs of a marijuana grow operation inside a home in your neighbourhood, police said: little or no human activity in the residence, neglected lawns and gardens, windows always covered and full of condensation, no snow on roof during the winter and people coming and going at odd hours, pulling into the garage and closing the door quickly, and items such as planters, fans and large lights being brought into the home. Patrol officers and firefighters sometimes come across the labs in the course of their routines-- investigating a report of a break-in at a home or a fire. Police say marijuana labs continue to flourish because the penalties given are too lenient, according to Peel Insp. Mark Marple, head of the force's Morality Bureau. Peel resident Sang Hoang Nguyen, 36, was recently convicted for the third time of charges relating to a marijuana lab. He served 18 days in jail. Sentences too lenient "The judges just don't consider it a tough crime, so they're not giving tough sentences," he said. "What we're seeing most of the time is conditional sentences and fines of $200 or $300. These (sentences) aren't even close to what they should be. The U.S. is livid at the types of sentences Canada gives for these crimes." Police said until the grow labs are regularly linked to violent crimes, there will be little done with regards to sentencing. A lot of the marijuana grown here and throughout the GTA is shipped by truck to the United States, Ryan said. More meth labs Meanwhile, unlike marijuana labs, methamphetamine (meth) labs are new to Peel Police, with the first one ever in the Region being discovered in Mississauga last summer. However, experts believe there are more here. Mark McLaughlin, president of the Crystal Meth Victoria Society, said there are labs here that police and the community have yet to locate. "I would think that would be a reasonable assumption," he said. "The movement of this product from the west (B.C.) is well under way and the sad part is we don't notice them unless we get a big explosion, big fire, or dead people." Police discovered a "super lab" on Mariner Court last July, when an explosion and fire in the home killed 33-year-old Jason White, who lived there, and left 45-year-old Rino Fazio, with permanent scarring all over his body. It took investigators two days to get into the home, as the levels of dangerous, potentially-deadly chemicals were too high. Eighteen homes in the area needed to be evacuated. Furthermore, this lab cost Peel taxpayers $116,000 in environmental and chemical disposal costs, to dismantle and render safe, according to Police Chief Mike Metcalf. McLaughlin said these labs are extremely dangerous to the producers and neighbours. "These are not university graduate chemists producing the drug. These are people who are probably stoned themselves trying to cook up meth using products under the kitchen sink," he said. There is a huge market for meth because "for cheaper than the price of a movie ticket, you get a 10-14 hour intoxication." Methamphetamine is a powerful stimulant that affects the central nervous system. Illegal in Canada, it's known by various street names including speed, meth, crystal meth and chalk. Meth is produced by cooking a mixture of more than a dozen chemicals, including a cold remedy blended with iodine, ammonia, paint thinner and other lethal substances. A $150 investment can produce about $10,000 worth of the drug. The drug-making process also produces unstable fumes, which can explode or catch fire. Like marijuana labs, meth labs are easily disguised in residential homes and their presence in Canada has increased significantly in recent years, according to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. What to look for The following things, McLaughlin said, should have residents suspicious that they might be living near a meth house: * several bottles of chemicals being left on the side of the house or being left out on the curb for trash pick-up; * propane tanks that have turned a blue/green colour at the top from the chemicals eating away at the metal and brass. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom