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Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jun 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Authors: Chad Skelton and Lori Culbert, Vancouver Sun OTTAWA PAYS B.C. LAWYERS MILLIONS TO FIGHT DRUG WAR The federal government is spending millions of dollars to hire private B.C. law firms to prosecute the booming number of marijuana growers arrested by police. The Nanaimo firm of Hunter, Garrett, Lobay billed Ottawa more than any other B.C. firm, filing more than $700,000 in legal fees the last fiscal year. Firm partner Shane Dennisson said growing operation cases represent well over half of the firm's total work for Ottawa. He said the number of such cases his firm has handled has "easily doubled and possibly tripled" in the past three years. Police across B.C. have stepped up their fight against marijuana growing-operations in the past year. Several cities -- including Surrey, Langley and Delta -- have "Green Team" units dedicated solely to executing search warrants on suspected drug houses. The number of growing-operation busts in the province jumped more than 40 per cent from 2,354 in 1998 to 3,331 in 1999. Details of the fees given to Crown agents -- private firms hired by Ottawa -- were published in a recent article in the Lawyer's Weekly by Cristin Schmitz, based on material obtained under Access to Information legislation. The biggest bill submitted to Ottawa last year -- $3.8 million -- was from a Chicago firm involved in litigation against U.S. tobacco companies. Second and third were U.S. firms involved in trade disputes. A Calgary firm defending the government against a suit brought by a native band submitted the largest Canadian bill: $934,428. Hunter, Garrett, Lobay was the fifth largest biller last year. Three other B.C. firms made the top 10, based largely on marijuana prosecutions. They include: - - $651,145 billed by Baker, Newby & Co. of Abbotsford. - - $571,863 billed by Murchison, Thomson & Clarke of Surrey. - - $549,690 billed by Michael Z. Galambos Law Corp. of Port Coquitlam. "It's quite lucrative for these firms," said John Conroy, an Abbotsford lawyer who has defended dozens of marijuana growers. Bob Prior, director of federal prosecutions for B.C., said there is no doubt the number of marijuana cases has gone up. "How much that has actually cost -- I don't know." Prior said the true costs of the police crackdown likely won't be known for another year. There is usually at least a three-or-four-month delay between an arrest and trial, he said, and some firms wait several months to bill the government. That means the cost of prosecuting those arrested in the past year likely hasn't shown up yet on the government's tab. He said it's not clear whether over-all costs will go up -- because the increased attention police have been giving to marijuana growers may mean there are fewer arrests in other areas, like street-level trafficking. - ---