Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jan 2011 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Craig Pearson A RECORD YEAR FOR DRUG BUSTS Almost $4.1M worth seized by city police Windsor police seized almost $4.1 million in illegal drugs in 2010, more than double the previous year and among the largest annual hauls in the force's history. Officers say the large seizures are indicative of the success of the Drugs, Intelligence, Guns and Surveillance unit, created in 2007 to tackle the city's drug problem. But the large haul also cements Windsor's dubious honour as the main conduit for drugs and guns into Canada. "We are the major connection between the United States and Canada in all trade, whether it is legal or illegal," said Windsor police Insp. Randy Gould, who runs the force's DIGS unit. "Canadian weed is the best weed. And Mexican weed. "So that goes into the United States and the United States trades money and cocaine products up here." According to Windsor police, though crime in general is dropping across Canada, drugs -- in particular hard drugs -- are maintaining a dangerous foothold in the community. In 2008, Windsor police seized $2.3 million in illegal drugs. In 2009, $1.8 million. In 2010, $4.1 million. Gould said the value of seizures continues to rise every year -- perhaps through a combination of better policing and bigger drug deals - -- as indicated by the largest seizure of cocaine in Windsor's history. Police seized $500,000 of coke in June but readily admit they only catch a fraction of the drugs coming through the city. "Certainly drugs impact everything," said Supt. Vince Power, of the investigative section. "It touches policy across the board, just as it touches society." The most common illegal drug remains marijuana. The one most associated with crime is cocaine or its freebased form, crack. The fastest rising hard drug these days is oxycodone, an opioid best known through its brand name OxyContin. "Crack's a huge problem for us," said Staff Sgt. Jim Farrand, of the DIGS unit. "It's very steady. We're seeing crack as much as we ever have." Hard drugs lead to a variety of social ills, Farrand said, including a wide range of crime, such as break-and-enters, robberies and assaults. Hence the need for the DIGS unit, which operates on a $5.3-million annual budget with an undisclosed number of plain clothes officers. "There's no question in my mind that through the efforts our enforcement people do on a daily basis, there is less of a propensity for violence in this city," Farrand said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt