Pubdate: Fri, 23 May 2008 Source: Vaughan Today (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Multimedia Nova Corporation Contact: http://www.vaughantoday.ca/contactform.html?choice=5 Website: http://www.vaughantoday.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4779 Author: Corey Lewis Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. $12M IN DRUGS SEIZED Massive Bust Of Grow-Ops In York Region York Regional Police Chief Armand La Barge has a warning for those caught up in the drug game: Watch out. We're watching you. The notice comes after police announced the outcome of a two-year anti-drug investigation, Project Tropical Storm. The Drug and Vice Enforcement Bureau operation shuttered 18 grow-operations around the GTA and York Region, and former Concord business Tropical Distribution. Police confiscated over $12 million worth of illegal narcotics and laid numerous criminal charges against the three company owners. Three grow-ops were within Vaughan's borders: homes on Thornhill Woods Dr., Benjamin Hood Ave. and Pieta Pl. Over 1,100 plants were seized in the city alone. "If you are existing in this capacity to support the illegal marijuana grow operations and other drug enterprises . we'll be investigating you," La Barge said at a news conference Friday. An anonymous tip in 2006 about the profusion of grow-ops in the GTA touched off the investigation, police said. An alleged link was established between the illicit enterprises and Tropical Distribution, which relocated to Toronto. The company served as a one-stop shop for the equipment, material and advice necessary for indoor production of marijuana, police said. While he declined to give a number, the police chief stated York Region is home to other similarly modeled businesses. "Here in York Region we fight a war on drugs and it's a war fought on many fronts," La Barge said. Millions of dollars of electricity were stolen due to this type of activity, he added. How the homes were attained is still under investigation, said Inspector Thomas Carrique. A Vaughan woman has been charged with fraud over $5,000 in connection with the property acquisitions. Most of the homes were owned outright, representing a shift away from leasing houses for these sorts of activities, Carrique said. In the past, he noted, drug traffickers and suppliers avoided the equity risk involved in purchasing a house. Though no children were involved in the grow-ops, La Barge took the opportunity to rail against parents who conduct this illicit and chemically hazardous activity in their household. The police chief called for harsher penalties when children are in danger. "What disturbs me is when our guys go in with the breathing apparatus, completely covered from head to toe, and there's an infant lying in the crib," La Barge said. "If you buy a $50 bag of marijuana, ask yourself, what role did you have to play in that whole chain of events?" Newmarket residents [name redacted], 41 and [name redacted] 28, were charged with 18 counts of production of a controlled substance, 18 counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking and numerous counts for theft of electricity. [name redacted], 28, of Mississauga, was charged with conspiracy to commit an indictable offense, three counts of production of a controlled substance, three counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking, and three counts of theft of electricity. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath