Pubdate: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 Source: Bracebridge Examiner (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Bracebridge Examiner Ltd. Contact: http://www.bracebridgeexaminer.com/contact_form?id=9 gme Website: http://www.bracebridgeexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2354 Author: Matthew Sitler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) DRAMATIC INCREASE IN MARIJUANA GROW-OPS: OPP It's getting worse, but no worse than in other rural areas. Muskoka is on par with similar geographic locations when it comes to the proliferation of outdoor marijuana grow-ops, said Det. Const. John Sheridan with the OPP's Central North Drug Enforcement Unit. The OPP recently issued a press release trumpeting the seizure of $27 million in marijuana plants from throughout Muskoka, Simcoe, Dufferin and Peel between June and October. The seizure represents a 200 per cent increase over 2008. In Muskoka, six outdoor plots containing a combined 5,102 plants were seized. Sheridan said this year's final tally isn't complete yet, as other police investigations are still ongoing. Asked if there's been an increase in outdoor grow-ops locally compared to other years, Sheridan said that in the last 10-year period, there's been a dramatic increase in Muskoka and similar places, like Parry Sound and Haliburton County. Some plots are easier to get to than others. "Some plots are close to the roads and some are back so far we have to be flown in and flown out by helicopter," said Sheridan. "There's evidence to suggest that the bad guys, too, are using helicopters. We also know that aircraft can be used by people to rip off growers. They'll do a reconnaissance of an area themselves, get the coordinates, and then send in a team to rip 'em off. I don't think it's a trusting business, I think everybody's kind of second guessing one another." Those responsible for outdoor grow ops can include various organized crime groups, he said. "You have the small grow, where you have a person who keeps it for himself and then you'll have larger grows where the plots may be near or on a grower's property, but where other investors are involved," he said. "These things have to be started elsewhere back in the winter. The plants are then transplanted in the later part of the spring." Five people were arrested in Huntsville several weeks ago, Sheridan said. "There was a $4.5-million outdoor grow operation there," he said. "There are still many investigations ongoing. Other investigations are not done and over with." He predicts more arrests could occur before winter. "There are all sorts of files that are still open," he said. "We never give up." Marijuana in general has adapted to Muskoka's climate very well, said Sheridan, pointing to the locale's hot summers and the abundance of swampy areas. "The quality of the marijuana produced here has been compared to what is referred to as 'BC Bud,' the marijuana that's coming out of British Columbia," he said. "The plant adjusts itself and is able to grow here, whereas it was almost unheard of years ago. And it seems to thrive, not just grow." Out of the areas cited in a recent press release, Sheridan said all are at about par when it comes to outdoor grow-ops. "Our biggest concern is that more and more we are seeing grows on private property where the property owner is not aware this is happening," he said. People should report plots to police if discovered, he continued. "Many locations are well guarded and booby-trapped," he said. "If we don't go at it, then someone's going to get hurt." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake