Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 Source: Niagara This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.niagarathisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3733 REPORTING GROW-OPS A CALL WORTH MAKING Their operators often set them up smack dab in the middle of residential neighbourhoods, hoping they'll go unnoticed. But there are common tell-tale signs of illegal marijuana grow-op enterprises: people coming and going at all hours, often carrying garbage bags; a humming sound or a TV or radio playing loudly all the time; people only entering the home through the garage; windows covered all the time; a skunk-like smell emanating from the home. Until recently, many Niagara residents probably didn't think twice if such things were going on at a neighbour's. That's changing as more and more people are apparently on the lookout for grow-ops that can yield vast profits for those that operate them. Niagara Regional Police busted grow-ops producing marijuana with a combined street value of more than $14.5 million last year, according to the most recent police statistics. The increasing number of grow-op tips is straining Crime Stoppers of Niagara, which offers cash rewards for calls that lead to convictions. Although Crime Stoppers doesn't say exactly how much it has paid out for grow-op tips, the organization's limited budget is being increasingly drained by such tips. Many people wrongly believe Crime Stoppers is an arm of Niagara police. In fact, Crime Stoppers is a federally registered charity that is funded through its own fundraising activities and through the donations of individuals, corporations and service groups. The agency is run on an entirely volunteer basis by people in Niagara who believe it is a valuable tool in preventing or solving crimes. Statistics back that up. Since the inception of Crime Stoppers in 1985, nearly 17,000 tips have led to 1,297 arrests, helped clear 2,815 cases, led to the recovery of $3.5 million in property and helped get $8.5 million worth of narcotics off the street, statistics show. Officials say marijuana grow-ops pose a life-threatening danger both to them and to the public. That's because grow-op operators make modifications to the structures such as crude hydro bypasses to siphon off vast amounts of hydro to power the light, alterations to furnaces that can produce deadly carbon monoxide, and ham-handed wiring inside. The operations pose dire fire and electrocution hazards, officials say. There's the old saying that no-one likes a rat. But if snitching on your neighbour gets one of these grow-ops put out of business and those responsible behind bars, it was a call worth making. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart