Pubdate: Fri, 04 Jun 2010 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/letters.html Website: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Jan Ranensbergen, The Gazette RAIDS NET 59 KILOS OF MARIJUANA Pot 'Compassion Centres'; $10,000 In Cash And 35 Suspects A Lachine medical-marijuana-distribution shop - which raised eyebrows by openly operating for months within eyesight of that borough's police station - has been put authoritatively out of business. A sweeping police crackdown Thursday shut all four such "compassion centres" operating on Montreal Island. More than 80 officers equipped with search warrants were deployed to a total of nine locations, five of them private homes of suspects involved in the retail outlets. When it was all over, they had rounded up 35 suspects and seized 59 kilograms of pot, a small quantity of hashish and about $10,000 in cash. "There were days when we observed more than 200 people going in and out" of the Culture 420 Compassion Club in Lachine, on 15th Ave. near the corner of Notre Dame St. W., Commander Antonio Iannantuoni said. The clampdown simultaneously shut two other medical-pot shops in Plateau Mont Royal borough, and a fourth on Papineau Ave. in the east end. It was conducted in co-ordination with a raid that closed a compassion centre in Quebec City. All had been selling pot, openly and in significant quantities, to walk-in clients who said they needed the drug for medical reasons. One person with an easily obtained notarized attestation of medical need, without such proof as a doctor's certificate, was all that was needed for groups of three or four people to load up at the Lachine outlet, nearby residents said. To his knowledge, Iannantuoni said, all medical-pot points of sale in Quebec have been shut. Most clients of the Lachine shop were under the age of 35, Iannantuoni said, citing reports filed by his investigators. Neighbours agreed that the vast majority of the pot shop's clientele appeared young and healthy. They scoffed at any suggestion each pot buyer could have a medical condition that would be alleviated with marijuana consumption. About five kilograms of pot was seized in the Lachine shop, Iannantuoni added. Eleven people were arrested. Among the arrested was Marc-Boris St-Maurice, founding leader of the Bloc Pot and the Marijuana Party of Canada. He is also founder and president of the Montreal Compassion Club. The outlet's website listed an eye-opening pre-bust "daily menu" offering a dozen varieties of pot, like Crack Berry, Cherry Bombs and Blue Haze. All but one strain were listed for $12 a gram, or seven grams for $60. Montreal police have decreed "zero tolerance" for the sale of pot, Iannantuoni said, and are telling people with a legitimate medical need for the drug to contact Health Canada. Use and cultivation of marijuana for certain medical conditions has been legal under Canadian law since 2001. "But it is illegal to sell it," Iannantuoni said. The suspects will face charges of trafficking and conspiracy, he added. Unless suspects have outstanding arrest warrants, he said, all will probably be released on conditions that would include renunciation of any marijuana selling, coupled with a promise to appear in court. The police probe revealed no links between the clubs and organized crime, street gangs or motorcycle gangs, said Iannantuoni. He heads the youth, morality and drug squad for the western part of Montreal Island. He specified that only suspects involved in the distribution were arrested. Pot consumption is said to help relieve pain and provide other benefits for cancer patients, people with brain injuries and others. One man on the scene - interviewed between calls on his cellphone - said he was a regular client, and expressed distress at the turn of events, although not for any medical reason. "I'm healthy - I just like to smoke the stuff," he said, asking that only his first name, Philippe, be published. Philippe said he would regularly pick up his supply at the pot shop, accompanied by his brother, who has a notarized, sworn attestation. Customers could also pick up what Philippe called "edibles" - brownies, cookies and banana bread laced with pot, most priced at $7 apiece, according to the pot shop's Internet menu. "It was just like going into any drug dealer's place," he said. "My favourite was the Mango Kuss." Where were all those different and rather exotic-sounding breeds of pot grown? "I don't ask where they get their stuff," Philippe replied. Iannantuoni said none of the raids came across any marijuana grow ops. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D