Pubdate: Thu, 26 Apr 2012 Source: Mirror (CN QU) Copyright: 2012 Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltee Contact: http://www.montrealmirror.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/267 Author: Patrick Lejtenyi HARSH HASH BUZZ What Last Week's Bust Says About Montreal's Port, Drug Market and the Mob By now, the marijuana world is buzzing with last week's news of the huge RCMP-led bust of Montreal-bound Pakistani hash-all 43.3 metric tonnes of it. Dubbed Project Celsius, the investiga-tion began in the summer of 2010, following the discovery of hash stored in containers at the Halifax and Montreal ports. It involved law enforcement agencies in Canada, the U.S., Pakistan, Italy and Belgium, and resulted in the arrest of nine Quebecers, all linked to Montreal's West End Gang. The hash, which had been seized in Europe and Pakistan, and smuggled in coffee, food items and clothing, had an estimated street value of $860-million, according to the Mounties. RCMP communications rep Corporal Luc Thibault says the seizures took place over the course of many months, and that they only announced the operation after they had made their arrests. They say they got their men: all nine had been the targets of the investigation, and they are not looking at other suspects. Three of the suspects worked for companies hired by the Port of Montreal; none worked directly for the Montreal Port Authority. But while there's no denying the size of the operation, not too many people are worried about a new, imminent hash drought in Quebec. INDUSTRY REGULATIONS According to veteran marijuana activist Marc-Boris St-Maurice, the bust, while eyebrow-raising, likely won't affect either the supply or even the price of a gram of hash here. The hash market is a tightly regulated moneymaker for a small group of criminals who have their own rules about the trade. The local kingpins, generally considered to be the Italian Mafia and the Hells Angels, are not supply-side economists. The amount and quality of hash on the streets is strictly controlled, with rules about who sells what to whom, where, when and in what quantity, says St-Maurice. "If they have a lot of hash, they'll sit on it," he says. "They can sit on it for years. "Certainly there's price fixing. Everyone agrees on what it should sell for, and there's no undercutting. There's tons of politics involved." What's interesting about the Montreal hash market today, says St-Maurice, is the way it rebounded after what he calls the "historic hash drought of the late 80s and early 90s." For a decade, he says, hash was "virtually un-findable" here, and most people who cared about such things suspected it had to do with suppliers keeping the floodgates closed in order to drive up the price. But what they didn't expect was the parallel rise in technology, especially hydroponic techniques, that made growing pot so easy for casual users. "More and more people got into production, and they realized they didn't need hashish. So the drought had the opposite effect: hash faded out of Quebec marijuana culture and local stuff took over." Demand for hash returned with its availability, says St-Maurice, especially among older users. The RCMP couldn't say where the hash was destined for, but given the quantities involved, the West End Gang's international connections and the Port of Montreal's historic role as a drug-smug-gling gateway to North America-Charlie "Lucky" Luciano used it to import heroin as far back as the 1930s-the 43 tonnes "certainly wouldn't be for a bunch of Irish guys getting stoned out of their minds," says D'Arcy O'Connor, author of Montreal's Irish Mafia: The True Story of the Infamous West End Gang. THE POST-MATTICKS ERA The Port had long been the fiefdom of notorious West End Gangster Gerald Matticks, until he was arrested in 2001. Although O'Connor says the now-paroled Matticks is "on a strict leash not to go near the Port," he is not sure the former head of the Coopers and Checkers' Union is quietly enjoying retirement. "The West End Gang, I assume, still has control over the ports," he says. "I'm sure the Irish guys haven't all gone totally straight or moved to Toronto." He recognizes one of the names of those arrested, Alain Charron, 63, from Val Morin, as a West End associate from the 1980s, and various court cases and investigations over the years have shown that the Gang is the principal supplier of hash to the Italian Mafia. And despite recent troubles of their own, they still wield a lot of power in the local drug trade. The RCMP's Thibault won't speculate on whether the arrests have dealt a death blow to anything, but did say that, "Somehow, somewhere, someone lost a lot of money." However, St-Maurice-who thinks the RCMP regularly overestimates the cash value of drug seizures-doesn't think much will change, no matter how much hash is discovered and destroyed. "There are busts all the time, and none of them put a dent in supply," he says. "If there is a dent, someone will step in and fill it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom