Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jan 2010 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Danielle Bell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DOWTOWN URBAN BUNKERS CONCEAL MARIJUANA PLANTS Police Descend On City Homes, Arrest Six People And Seize Thousands Of Plants Growing In Underground Rooms Nanaimo RCMP have uncovered a network of sophisticated underground drug bunkers, hidden below workshops and houses, that concealed thousands of growing marijuana plants. At 10 a.m. on Friday, as many as 40 officers, including those with the emergency response team, "green team" and canine units, simultaneously swarmed five homes in central and downtown Nanaimo, arresting three men and three women. Police searched three properties along Terminal Avenue North, one on Milton Street and one on Watkins Street. City property records suggest at least three of the homes may be owned by members of the same family, but police would not say if the registered homeowners were among the people arrested. Officers left the properties on Milton and Watkins streets by early afternoon, but remained on site at the Terminal Avenue property all day Friday. The large lot, set back from the street, has a recently built home and an older, rundown building. Police sources say there are two bunkers on the lot, one under each house. A trap door inside the new home led to one bunker and another trapdoor in the bathroom floor of the older home led to a second bunker. There were thousands of plants inside the two underground rooms, police said. A large moving truck that police sometimes use to haul away seizures could be seen on the property as officers came and left throughout the afternoon, including several in unmarked vehicles. The raids came as a surprise to neighbours of the Terminal Avenue homes, who were shocked to hear that such a well-established marijuana-growing operation was in the middle of their busy family neighbourhood. Neighbours like Jesse Wickett watched the construction of the new home for months. "Since we moved in, we were curious what they were doing," said Wickett. "I'm kind of shocked. It's kind of creepy." Neighbour Rob Bagshaw had just returned home from breakfast at a nearby restaurant when he saw a convoy of RCMP vehicles rush down Terminal Avenue. "I have never seen anything weird there before," said Bagsaw, who lives across the street from the Terminal property. "I have never seen a person there before." Neighbours said they saw a pickup and groundskeepers visit the property once in a while, but saw no one who may have lived there. The lack of any homeowners perturbed one longtime neighbour so much he was ready to walk across the street and knock on the door. Neighbours of the Milton Street home said the people renting there had only been there for a few months. Police say it is too early in the investigation to say whether the suspects have links to organized crime. The scope of the operation will be investigated as officers continue to clear the homes. Police say they have raided at least one other bunker in Nanaimo in recent years, but this high-end operation is not common. "It's unusual, especially in a residential area," said Nanaimo RCMP spokesman Const. Gary O'Brien. "It's fairly sophisticated." UNDERGROUND CRIME Criminals going underground to stash drugs or weapons is uncommon but not new in Nanaimo. Sept. 2008: Police seize a cache of weapons from an Extension-area bunker, as well as drugs, money, explosives and stolen property. April 2005: Police seize nearly 2,000 pot plants from a growing-operation burrowed into a Northwood Road residence. June 2000: A South Wellington home raided by police unearthed drugs, counterfeit cash surveillance equipment and weapons, including a rocket launcher, AK 47 assault rifle, Taser and swords. Police went to the Grandom Place home searching for marijuana when the underground concrete bunker was discovered. March 1999: Police busted a marijuana growing-operation concealed in a concrete bunker at a Caledonia Road home. Inside the bunker, originally used for a water system, officers hauled away 21 seedlings, 30 pot plants and 42 other plants dried and ready to be cut. Compiled by Daily News - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D