Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jul 2010 Source: Chilliwack Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Chilliwack Times Contact: http://www.chilliwacktimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1357 Author: Paul J. Henderson MAYOR NOT BUYING VICTIM ACT The owner of the property where the largest marijuana grow operation in Chilliwack RCMP history was discovered last year played the innocent victim at city council on Monday, but Mayor Sharon Gaetz didn't buy his story. Lloyd Allan McConnell of Langley is the owner of a Nixon Road property where 11,520 marijuana plants were discovered in September 2009 in an underground bunker in what Chilliwack RCMP called "the largest, most sophisticated" grow operation ever. Police say a conservative estimate of the value of the crop was at least $3 million. After the bust, and at the RCMP's request, the city carried out a health and safety inspection and "hazardous conditions" were found and reported to the owner. After a series of further letters to the owner of 7630 Nixon Rd. ordering the building cleaned up and secured, the city held a show cause hearing on July 19 to file a notice on the title related to health and safety issues stemming from the grow-op. McConnell is the president of a numbered company that owns the property, and lawyer Nathan Muirhead attended the Monday hearing to ask city council to delay putting the notice on title. "The owner hasn't received formal notice of what is required to bring this into compliance," he told council. "The bylaw requires that within 30 days, all carpets and curtains in the premises must be removed or cleaned, any forced air heating ducts in the premises must be cleaned, and all walls and ceilings must be cleaned in disinfected," Gaetz read to Muirhead from the Sept. 9 letter sent to McConnell, after adding that the city has little tolerance for grow-ops. "What part of that doesn't your client understand?" she asked. Muirhead shifted gears and said in this case the city's nuisance, noxious or offensive trades, health and safety bylaw was inappropriate because vandals had damaged the house and it was likely beyond repair and needed to be torn down. And, the lawyer explained, the owner is in the middle of a civil forfeiture proceeding for the property that forbids him from making alterations. Muirhead also said "the owner is an innocent victim" with respect to the massive grow operation discovered on his property. "We do have a bylaw that says the owner has to inspect the property every two months or we consider them to be complicit," Gaetz responded. The grow site took a toll on the surrounding environment, as police say chemicals were spilled at the site used in the grow-op. As well, the operators had run an irrigation line from nearby Elk Creek, a fish-bearing stream, and were pumping water to supply the grow-op. Water was not the only thing the operation was siphoning illegally. Police estimate that based on the amount of time they believe the grow-op was in business, it probably consumed more than $400,000 of stolen hydro electric power. Despite the pleas from the owner's lawyer, council unanimously voted to file notice on title of the property because of the deficiencies from the grow-op. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D