Source: Montreal Gazette Contact: Tue 22 Jul 1997 News A1 Mounties targeting indoor pot: The RCMP call for regulations to govern the purchase of basins, lamps and waterpumps used to cultivate marijuana indoors. By: JIM BRONSKILL The RCMP want government to regulate the sale of hydroponic equipment to help snuff out illegal marijuana cultivation, a booming source of revenue for the Hell's Angels biker gang and other criminals. The Mounties say that indoor pot growing reached record levels last year, generating high profits that will attract further interest from organized crime. And a newly declassified RCMP study warns that as long as there are no regulations governing the purchase of basins, lamps and waterpumps used to cultivate marijuana, growing facilities will sprout up across the country. The study, The Hydroponic Cultivation of Marijuana in Canada: Evolution and Trends, was prepared by the RCMP's criminal intelligence directorate in May 1995, but not publicly released. A copy of the classified report was recently obtained under the Access to Information Act. Marijuanagrowers are turning away from conventional outdoor cultivation and opting for greenhouses and hydroponic facilities, in part because growing pot in controlled surroundings increases its psychoactive ingredient, making it more attractive to users. The RCMP study recommends that businesses that sell hydroponic equipment be required to record the names and addresses of customers. Currently, there are no laws specifically governing such sales and it is presumed the items are to be used for commercial gardening. The study, however, suggests some equipment dealers have criminal connections. ``There is no attempt here to tar all suppliers of hydroponic equipment with the same brush, but there is certainly reason to afford them special attention, especially in light of some information provided by a number of divisions.'' Chief Superintendent Wayne Wawryk, the RCMP's director of criminal intelligence, said in an interview that controlling the sale of hydroponic equipment would be useful. But such transactions fall under provincial jurisdiction, which could make it tricky for the federal government to do much. ``It might be very difficult to deal with that issue,'' Wawryk said. William Sutherland, who runs a hydroponic retail outlet in Vanier, Ont., says he wants nothing to do with marijuana, but adds he can't control what people do with the equipment he sells. Sutherland believes potgrowers will simply steal the necessary items if governments impose controls, such as registration of buyers' names. ``It'll never make a difference to those people.'' There are regulations governing equipment sales in the United States, which has taken a harder line on drugs and often imposes tougher penalties than Canada against potgrowers and traffickers. Police believe the differences in approach account for the fact Canadian growers, including many in British Columbia, now export large quantities of pot south of the border. The RCMP say the B.C. Hell's Angels are heavily involved in hydroponic cultivation and export to other provinces, as well as western U.S. states. Police believe thousands of hydroponic facilities operate yearround in British Columbia. Hydroponic potgrowing has also soared in Quebec and Alberta, says the RCMP's outlook on organized crime for 1997. ``The profits generated by the cultivation of marijuana will encourage criminal groups to increase their involvement in this illicit activity.'' Technology is making life easier for the grower, who can now use a computer to monitor a remote indoor facility without actually visiting the premises until the plants are ready for harvest. Temperature, light levels and nutrient flow can all be controlled electronically, the marijuana study says. ``The era of cyberhydroponics is now upon us.''