Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 2010 Source: Meridian Booster (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Osprey Media Contact: http://www.meridianbooster.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.meridianbooster.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1590 Author: Murray Crawford MORE POWER IN DRUG FIGHT LLOYDMINSTER - With four major marijuana busts since mid-October the Lloydminster RCMP are hard at work getting drugs off city streets. Last Wednesday police officers across Canada received a helping hand from the Supreme Court of Canada. In a 7-2 decision the court ruled police can track electricity usage while investigating marijuana grow operations. The ruling stems from a Calgary case where a man was arrested after police installed a digital recording ammeter, DRA, on his house. The DRA tracks a household's electricity use. The police used this and other observations to make an arrest. Gombac was convicted on two drug-related offences, he appealed. In Alberta appeals court Gombac appealed on the grounds the DRA search constituted an illegal search and the court ruled in his favour. With Wednesday's Supreme Court ruling the use of tracking electricity patterns to determine if a marijuana grow operation is active is once again a legal police tool. For the Lloydminster detachment the ruling provides another tool in their enforcement repertoire. "In terms of it being an investigative tool, I'd say it's a positive for us," said Const. Robert Wilson. "It's a decision that helps us do our job, definitely." The most recent local marijuana seizure happened on Nov. 24, which led to charges against one man. The largest drug seizure of the past few months included 5.75 ounces of cocaine, 3.5 ounces of cannabis marijuana, 2.5 pounds of marijuana, 122 ecstasy pills and several weapons including pool cues, batons, a .22 rifle and a machete. The operation, which occurred on Oct. 31, led to charges against one man. RCMP Sgt. Patrick Webb, K Division spokesman, said the tracking of electricity usage is one of several tools police can use to build a case. "Where it becomes important to us is it is part of forming the grounds to obtain a search warrant," said Webb. "It can be used to confirm there is a suspected marijuana grow operation. It provides some grounds for us to get a search warrant, but it may provide information if the electric use is not present, which may give us reason to believe there is no grow-op." The use of DRA is not the only tool the police need to find and break up a grow operation but it does help. "It is one more tool to use," said Webb. "By no means is it the only one we would be able to get a search warrant from. You do not get a search warrant without establishing significant grounds. This is one of many grounds we would have to establish." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt