Pubdate: Fri, 09 Apr 2010 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/comment/letters/write/ Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Randy Richmond, London Free Press Note: part of a series by the London Free Press NO 'MOM AND POP' BUSINESS THE GROWERS: An Inside Look At London's Marijuana Trade Slicker than ever, secretive grow operations stashed in London homes churn out four crops a year of marijuana -- so much pot, police say, organized crime must be involved. But staying ahead of savvy growers, reporter Randy Richmond finds, is no longer as simple as telling the neighbours to be alert. The couple seemed ordinary enough, at first. The husband left the house each morning and came home in the evening. He chatted occasionally with the next-door neighbour, grumbling one day about taking the weeds out between the cobblestone walk. "My wife says I should do it," he told the neighbour, then added what turned out to be an ironic aside: "I hate gardening." There were, however, a few odd things about the couple. The neighbour works out of her home, and her kitchen and office overlook the couple's yard. "The first day they moved in, the first thing she did was walk around the side of the house and look at the hydro meter." Even when the weather finally turned nice late last summer, the couple kept their windows closed and the air-conditioner off. There were more oddities. They never moved a couple of old flower pots left in the yard by the previous owners. Each time they arrived home, they zipped into the garage so fast they must have hit the close button on the way in, the neighbour figured. The wife mysteriously disappeared for a long stretch, supposedly visiting her family somewhere in Asia. The neighbour called police. Four months later, police arrested a 45-year-old Richmond Hill man after seizing 575 marijuana plants they valued at $575,000, 18 pounds of processed marijuana valued at $81,000, growing equipment and a car. It was the last of 42 marijuana grow operations busted in 2009. That was 10 more than the year before. This year, London police are on pace to bust more than 50 of the illegal pot factories. The Oakridge neighbour's experience reveals much about the people involved in the booming grow-op business in London. "The numbers are definitely increasing and the operations are becoming more sophisticated," says Det. Supt. Ken Heslop, head of the London police criminal investigation division. Grow operators are more organized, better at hiding their work and better at deflecting justice, Heslop says. The new sophistication begins from the ground up. In the past, grow operators would usually rent a house, set up the lights and go. But any kind of problem -- a water leak or power outage, for example -- brought nosey landlords. Now, grow-op owners buy their own properties. "They don't risk the chance of an inspection. They are buying it with (a minimum down payment) and they are trying to buy them in subdivisions where they blend in," Heslop says. The people neighbours see are usually only one part of the operation, he adds. More and more often now, operators hire different people to do different jobs. "You would have someone get it ready, do the electrical bypass, someone does the planning, someone who goes in and tends the plants, someone who goes in at the end of it and harvests the crop and the process starts again." That makes it easy for any one person caught to deny knowing the others in the operation. "They isolate the people. If you and I are doing it on different shifts, you and I might never know each other, might never meet each other. All we know is our job," Heslop says. Those running grow-ops generally hire only a small group of people to keep the chances of chatter to a minimum. "If you are going to be recruiting someone, it is going to be someone you know and someone who has no criminal record, so if and when they do get caught, the penalty is going to be a lot less." The operators are getting a lot better at keeping their business a secret, Heslop says. "A lot of the telltale signs we used to tell people to watch for are no longer there." Police used to tell Londoners to watch out for a house that's being neglected. "The people who grow marijuana are onto that, as well. They look after the houses. They cut the grass. They take care of the shrubs. They shovel the driveway." Grow operations, which need lots of power to operate the lights and heat for plants, used to routinely tap into hydro boxes outside houses. Now, some operators drill through the wall of a basement to secretly access electricity lines, Heslop says. Police still tell neighbours to watch out for people moving large lights and equipment into a house, and big bags of dirt out. New suburban houses, though, have large garages with access directly into the house. That allows operators to simply pull in, close the garage door, and move equipment in without the prying eyes of neighbours. A telltale sign of a grow-op used to be the skunky sweet smell of marijuana drifting from a house. Operators often vented the growing room through a dryer vent and, eventually, neighbours would get a whiff of the air. "Now they often run it through charcoal filters, or vent it into an inside bedroom, where it is absorbed," Heslop says. Just how well grow-ops can hide -- for awhile at least -- is evident in two busts in a new neighbourhood in London's southeast end. Within six months, police busted two grow-ops a block apart, seizing 2,277 plants worth about $2.3 million. The couple that moved into one of those homes kept the place neat and the lawn trimmed, says one neighbour. "If you saw them walking down the street, you would never have thought they were doing anything wrong," she says. The degree of sophistication is just one of many signs to police that the large-scale operations in London are run by organized crime groups. But Heslop won't say there's any one particular group dominating the grow-op business in London. According to U.S. the Drug Intelligence Center's 2010 threat assessment, Asian groups in Canada and the U.S. have found a niche with high-potency marijuana because the drug is not usually trafficked by Mexican, Colombian or Dominican organizations. But the report notes that just about anyone can get into grow-ops. "Asian DTOs (drug trafficking organizations) are willing to co-operate with other criminal groups to increase their profit and work with Caucasian, Hispanic, and African American DTOs or criminal groups in most major cities in an effort to expand their drug distribution and customer base," the report says. The real proof for police that organized crime is behind London grow-ops is the sheer amount of the product. The average grow-op in London is about 400 plants, Heslop says. That produces about 50 pounds of marijuana. With four harvests a year, each grow-op has to get rid of a yearly crop of 200 pounds of marijuana worth about $1.6 million. "That is a substantial amount of product to be moving. How do they dispose of that?" Heslop says. "That is where organized crime comes in. You have to have links to be able to sell it. That is not being done by a couple of people in London deciding they are going to plant 500 plants and end up with 60 pounds and say, 'what are we going to do with this?' There has to be a market and they have to know how to get it there and what they are going to do with it at the other end. This is not mom-and-pop. This is big business." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D