Pubdate: Fri, 03 Dec 2010 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Arthur Williams RCMP TASK FORCE BUSTS 27 GROW OPS IN CARIBOO A new RCMP task force has busted 27 marijuana grow operations and seized over 54,000 marijuana plants in the Cariboo region since Sept. 7. Police also seized six unregistered firearms and arrested 24 suspects in the busts. Charges are pending further investigations. RCMP Federal Drug Enforcement Branch spokesman Const. Michael McLaughlin said the Cariboo Region Integrated Marijuana Enforcement (CRIME) Task Force is just getting started. "We're not content with just street-level arrests. We want to get important players in jail," McLaughlin said. "These are not mom and pop organizations, this is organized crime." The task force is made up of 20-25 officers from the RCMP Federal Drug Enforcement Branch, Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit and drug investigators from Prince George, Williams Lake, Quesnel and 100 Mile House. Many of the operations were clustered around Williams Lake, 100 Mile House and Prince George, he said. Police would not disclose the locations of all the grow operations busted. Between May, 2009 and the formation of the task force in September, 2010 RCMP saw a 300 per cent increase in public tips and complaints about marijuana grow operations in the Cariboo region. During the same period, the number of police investigations into grow operations in Prince George, Williams Lake, 100 Mile House and Quesnel increased by 60 per cent. "We have come here because the people told us to be here," McLaughlin said. The size and sophistication of the growing operations being busted has also increased, he said. The average size of grow operations in the region increased 33 per cent. Many use high power generators or complex methods of stealing power for grow lamps. McLaughlin urged residents to report any suspicious activity to local police forces or to Crime Stoppers. In Prince George call 250-561-3300 or 1-800-222-TIPS(8477) to make tips. Some signs a house may be used as a grow op include the home having an "unlived in" appearance, despite people coming and going to it. Heavy condensation on the inside of windows or lack of snow on the roof, caused by the grow lamps used by grow operations, are other possible signs. People fiddling with B.C. Hydro boxes, or generators running in remote areas, can indicate gangs are stealing or generating power for grow lamps. Remote forestry roads which are suddenly closed with barricades can be another warning sign. North District RCMP Chief Superintendent Barry Clark said the sheer size and remoteness of the region makes enforcement a challenge. "We have an area that is criss-crossed with all kinds of logging roads. We cover 77 per cent of B.C. with 37 detachments," Clark said. The grow operations have been linked to local, B.C. and international gangs, he said. Partnerships, and violent rivalries, exist between the gangs growing marijuana in the region. "We're seeing a connection to some Asian groups," he said. "It's being grown for export. (Much of it) is travelling south of the boarder for cocaine and guns." Many of the 24 people arrested were from outside the region, including many from the Lower Mainland, Clark added. "The people who run these have no respect for the land," he said. "Streams are being diverted, growth-enhancing chemicals are being dumped, garbage is strewn about." Professor Darryl Plecas, RCMP research chairman at the University of the Fraser Valley, said large-scale marijuana production for export has "expanded tenfold," in the last decade. "These grows are the single biggest reason we have organized crime in this province," Plecas said. "It's near fair comment to say we're Columbia north. We've moved to a situation where we're like Columbia... like Mexico. We're a huge exporter." The number of gangs growing and exporting marijuana to the U.S. and importing guns and cocaine back into Canada has exploded in the last decade, Plecas said. The United Nations has cited Canada as a source country for marijuana. The increasing number of gangs results in increased risk of violence like the gang wars seen in Mexico, he added. If grow operations in the Cariboo aren't dealt with quickly, the region could become ground zero of deadly inter-gang conflict. "The number (police) get relative to the number out there are small," he said. "Police in the Lower Mainland have had a great deal of success in curbing crime... We just need to do this in a much bigger and more sustained way. The police are grossly under resourced for what's coming up today." A typical grow operation like the ones busted by police since September could generate $1 million or more in tax-free income for the gangs operating them, Plecas said. A study of the average penalties facing people involved in grow operations was fines in the $1,000 to $2,000 range and three to four months in jail. "We as researchers have been pointing out the need to increase the consequences," Plecas said. "Jail isn't a great thing. But there are some people who need to go to jail, and go to jail for a significant period of time." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt