Source: London Free Press (Canada) Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/LondonFreePress/home.html Pubdate: July 17, 1998 Author: By Jeremy Torobin -- Free Press Reporter POLICE HARVEST SET FOR AREA POT CROP Police across Southwestern Ontario are gearing up for their annual blitz to root out illegal marijuana from farmers' fields. But most renegade pot cultivators will likely just count their losses and remain anonymous. That's because while the joint effort between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Ontario Provincial Police and civic police forces is expected to net about 24,000 plants this summer, police don't expect to nab anywhere near that number of growers. Last year, police pulled more than 25,000 plants from cornfields, creek beds and rural bush throughout the region but arrested only 14 people for cultivating pot on others' property. Police seized more than 5,000 plants in Middlesex, Elgin and Oxford counties alone -- but made no arrests. "In an ideal world, we would catch more people," said Staff Sgt. Marty Van Doren, head of the London RCMP detachment's drug section. "But if we find a patch of 30 or 40 plants, we can't afford the manpower to have two or three (officers) sit there for a day, two days or two weeks waiting for somebody to come and get them," he said. Still, just seizing the plants helps to foil some potentially large trafficking operations, police said. Police estimate the street value of each marijuana plant -- some will yield as little as about 28 grams of usable pot, while others will produce up to 454 grams -- averages out to about $100. Drug cops are on the beat throughout the growing season, from the May long weekend until early October, but they step up their enforcement efforts for a week-long "major onslaught" in the late stages of summer, Van Doren said. The last two years, in addition to helicopter and ground unit searches, police have appealed more than ever for public help to find hidden pot plants. "Every year we seem to get a little more help because we're educating people and we get more and more farmers calling us or Crime Stoppers (1-800-222-TIPS) and saying they've spotted plants," said London OPP Det. Const. Bob Martin, local co-ordinator for the Southwestern Ontario marijuana eradication effort. Police haven't arrested any outdoor growers so far this season in the three counties surrounding London, but they have seized an average number of plants, Van Doren and Martin said. Police destroy the seized plants unless they make an arrest and need samples as evidence, Van Doren said. Pete Young, owner of The Organic Traveller store at 343 Richmond St. in London, said growers are finding more effective ways to hide their plants from police, such as scattering them rather than planting them in patches. Although marijuana is similar in appearance to industrial hemp, which was legalized earlier this year, marijuana is comparatively easy to identify in farmers' fields because anyone growing hemp for fibre or grain has to grow at least four hectares. Copyright (c) 1998 The London Free Press - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski