Pubdate: Fri, 05 Sep 2008 Source: Hanover Post, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2008, Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.thepost.on.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2612 Author: Laura MacDuff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) LOCAL POLICE SERVICES HELP WITH MARIJUANA ERADICATION PROJECT HANOVER -Hanover Police Services and West Grey Police were two local detachments involved in OSABOT -a five-day marijuana eradication program that brought in a street value of more than $5 million worth of marijuana from southwestern Ontario. The collaboration and co-operation of nine different police services made the eradication successful, said Constable Laurence Yim of the RCMP Kitchener Detachment, in a press release. With the joined efforts, the marijuana plants were located, seized and destroyed. The eradication took place from Mon., Aug. 25, to Fri., Aug. 29. When The Post contacted Const. Yim by phone, he couldn't give the exact locations where the marijuana was seized but he said there was marijuana seized from this area. Yim said information and intelligence shared by federal, provincial, regional and municipal police services helped to identify a number of outdoor marijuana grow sites. The eradication included human and technical resources. Yim said the main goal of the eradication was to remove the plants from areas and stop them from turning into profit for dealers and keep the drug from the streets. The press release said that the success of Project OSABOT directly impacts and reduces the amount of marijuana available for distribution into our communities. Proceeds gained from illegal profiteering have been linked to the financing of other criminal activities or organized crime. Yim said that with an outdoor grow operation, it is much more difficult to catch who is conducting the grow operation. Indoor operations are, he said, in almost all circumstances, directly related to the owner of the home. With outdoor grow operations, there are a vast number of possibilities. A person who owns a very large piece of property could have a grow operation on their field, and never know. He said it's not always directly related to the person who owns the property. Yim said it isn't always easy for the officers to enter into a grow-op. He added that there can be booby traps laid out, explaining that officers can face anything from something just making a noise to a shotgun setup meant to seriously harm someone. There were nine police services involved in the eradication. Others included Waterloo Region Police Service, Guelph Police Service, Stratford Police Service, Saugeen Shores Police Service, and Oxford Community Police Service. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath