Pubdate: Thu, 17 Sep 2009 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2009 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Derwin Gowan, Staff Writer DRUG COURIERS TARGETED Enforcement Police Putting Officers Aboard Grand Manan Ferry GRAND MANAN - Drug couriers should be careful talking to strangers on their way to Grand Manan this fall. The RCMP intends to put both plain-clothed and uniformed officers on the ferries to interrupt drug traffic to the island, Cpl. Andy Cook said in an interview Wednesday. "We're going to change our times so they won't get used to our schedule," Cook said. "They won't know." RCMP officers do know "certain characteristics" to watch for looking for drug couriers, especially with help from Grand Manan residents who provide information, Cook said. Information from the public helped the RCMP effort this summer to eradicate marijuana growing outdoors on the island, Cook said. In August and September the Grand Manan RCMP seized more than 110 marijuana plants from seven locations, the RCMP stated in a news release this week. These plants could have made 55,000 marijuana joints. The police checked approximately 15 sites around the island based on information from the public, and checked other areas where people have historically planted marijuana. The 2,460 people, according to the most recent census, who live on Grand Manan get along better than they did with the RCMP, Mayor Dennis Greene said in an interview Thursday. On July 22, 2006, about 40 people attended a riot at a home on Cedar Street that many people called a "crack house." The home, belonging to Ronnie Ross, burned. On Nov. 18, 2006, a jury convicted four of five people charged with offences including arson. People took the law into their own hands three years ago because they perceived as a lack of action by the authorities over the drug problem on Grand Manan, Greene said then. He still says this. "The relationship with the RCMP and the public has been improving since the arrival of Cpl. Andy Cook two years ago," Greene said Wednesday. "We couldn't ask for any better." The RCMP acts on information from the public, which many people did not believe happened before the Cedar Street riot, Greene said. "People were saying they were contacting the RCMP and they weren't acting on it," Greene said. Besides relying on information from the public on illicit gardens in the woods, the RCMP provides a helicopter to fly over the island once a year. Marijuana plants need sunlight, so the growers must plant in open areas. The pilot and crew know what to look for. Nobody can say for sure what effect these efforts have on the drugs available in any community, but prices do reflect supply and demand. "We know that the price went way up for cocaine and marijuana," Cook said. "There's been a notable increase in the price." In 2007 the RCMP harvested about 80 marijuana plants growing outdoors on Grand Manan, and fewer than that in 2008. This year it jumped to more than 110 and still counting. As for other drugs, the party drug ecstasy, or other pills sold as ecstasy, is a concern on Grand Manan, Cook said. "A good portion of our supply of drugs comes from off the island," Cook said - the reason for patrolling the ferry. With the Grand Manan detachment up to its full complement of four members, the RCMP has enough officers to patrol the ferry, Greene said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr