Pubdate: Wed, 02 Apr 2008 Source: Chatham This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Chatham This Week Contact: http://www.chathamthisweek.com/contact.php Website: http://www.chathamthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/719 Author: Peter Epp Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CHATHAM-KENT CITIZEN GROUPS ENCOURAGED IN LOCAL WAR ON DRUGS Sometime last year, someone in the Dresden area ordered a pizza, but the person who delivered the order sensed something was wrong when they arrived at the address. Something didn't smell right. Leaving the house, the delivery person followed a hunch and called police. Several hours later, after police had obtained a warrant, four people in the house were arrested and charged with growing marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. Police also seized hundreds of plants from what turned out to be a substantial growing operation - the source of the musty smell that had aroused the curiosity of the pizza delivery person. If not for that telephone call, police would not have been able to make the arrest and remove hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of marijuana plants from Chatham-Kent's illicit drug trade, 60 representatives from a dozen or so Neighbourhood Watch organizations were told last Saturday. "Members of the community can be our eyes and ears," Deputy Police Chief Dennis Poole told the group, while further quoting Sir Robert Peel, the father of modern policing: "The public are the police, and the police are the public." That relationship between citizen and police was explored as the Crime Prevention and Safety Board of Chatham-Kent held its first policing education session. And in particular, the community's growing drug problem was discussed as two detective-sergeants with the Chatham-Kent Police Service spoke candidly about some of the cases they've dealt with, as well as the relationship they have with organizations such as East Side Pride and Neighbourhood Watch. Jeff Teetzel and Dan Graham, members of the police service's drug enforcement unit, said their job is to "take a good chunk out of the (drug) problem (in Chatham-Kent)," but they quickly added that they need help from the community. The pair spoke about marijuana growing operations in the field and in houses, about Chatham's large crack cocaine problem, and about the growing problem of crystal methamphetamine - both as a hideous narcotic, and as an environmental problem within the communities and neighbourhoods in which crystal meth is manufactured. The marijuana growing operation police raided in the Dresden area last year is an example of some of the work that Teetzel and Graham do. Any success they have in making arrests comes after a lot of work and preparation - but tips from citizens and from groups like Neighbourhood Watch are welcomed. Teetzel said most houses that harbour a growing operation contain anywhere between one and 1,500 plants. As a rule of thumb, police place a value of $1,000 on a single mature marijuana plant - based on its potential street value. The growing operations that are conducted behind closed curtains and blinds are frequently sophisticated, but there are some tell-tale signs that neighbours can take note of, Teetzel said. "Usually you'll find that the windows are curtained or blacked out, and if it's the winter months, you won't see much snow accumulation on the roof or around the basement walls. These operations throw off a lot of heat." Police use heat-measuring devices when they suspect a home or building might be the location for a growing operation, and Teetzel said these devices often signal a tremendous amount of heat loss that is mostly invisible to the naked eye. Police also have access to utility records and can sometimes isolate those addresses where an inordinate amount of electricity is being used. Craftier growers will steal electricity, however, from neighbouring houses, so as not to raise any immediate alarm. Two years ago, police made an arrest at an address in East Kent, where they said they found that over $70,000 worth of electricity had been stolen to power lights and equipment for a very sophisticated indoor growing marijuana operation. That case is still before the courts. Graham said marijuana cultivation is also conducted in the cornfields of Chatham-Kent. Once the corn is planted and germinates into a seedling, growers will secretly begin to cultivate marijuana plants between the rows. Sometimes they won't return until the fall, to harvest their crop. "Some of these guys are so brazen that they'll approach the farmer and offer him money to use their fields," said Graham. "You'd be surprised. It does happen." Teetzel and Graham also discussed crack cocaine and the economics behind its enterprise. They agreed that it's a big problem in Chatham, and that its production in the community is so well-known that dealers from London, Windsor and Toronto are attracted here. The two cops said crack cocaine in Chatham is starting to become as common a street drug as marijuana. It's also one of the main reasons behind the spate of home and car break-ins that have rippled throughout the community. "Users have to get their fix and they need money, so they just break a window in a car looking for loose cash, or they break into a house or business," said Graham. "That's the reason why we're having all these crimes. It's drugs and the need for these users to pay for their habit." Teetzel said crystal meth isn't as prominent in Chatham-Kent as marijuana or cocaine, but said its presence is growing. It's an incredibly dangerous drug, he added, because of its addictive qualities, and because of the environmental danger its manufacture presents to neighbours. "We had a meth lab in Wallaceburg actually blow up, and the guy that was running it was a trained chemist," said Teetzel. "That's how unstable and how dangerous these chemicals are, that are used to make this drug. We have to be very careful as police officers when we go into one of these labs. You can imagine what kind of danger these labs present to the community." Graham added that crystal meth is so addictive that an estimated 95% of its users were "fully and forever addicted" after using the drug one time. "They never get off it." He said the drug sells for between $100 and $125 a gram, and is therefore very profitable for the manufacturer. But because meth is so expensive, users also frequently turn to crime to fulfill their habit. "It's not a very pretty drug habit," Teetzel said. "People who are users will age right before your eyes." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath