HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html War On Grow-Ops A Losing Battle
Pubdate: Sat, 03 Sep 2005
Source: Saturday Okanagan,  The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 Saturday Okanagan
Contact:  http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1206
Author: Chuck Poulsen

WAR ON GROW-OPS A LOSING BATTLE

KELOWNA -- Even if Kelowna RCMP could bust a grow-op a day, they would never
catch up with the amount of marijuana being cultivated here

Cpl. Carey Chernoff, head of the drug unit in Kelowna, said there are
several hundred grow-ops in the Central Okanagan, perhaps up to 1,000
Valley-wide

"The drug unit at Kelowna city could be three times the size and we could do
a grow every day -- and still have plenty left over," said Chernoff

"We'd never catch up with all of them. It's that prolific." Kelowna RCMP
average about two grow busts a week

Chernoff said a day doesn't go by when police don't get at least a few new
tips. He said grow-ops, especially in B.C., have become an attractive
business because of light penalties from the courts

"There's big money in it and low risk," said Chernoff. "Penalties through
the justice system don't provide much deterrent. If you look at the money
you can make out of a grow, then, like any business, you weigh the risks
against the upside."

Growers might receive a short jail term, but most likely a fine, said
Chernoff.

"The way sentencing has gone in B.C., in particular, they (growers) are
saying, `Why not grow marijuana?'

"There are so many of them now that if someone is sitting on a grow, he
probably thinks, `They won't get mine.'

"We're doing what we can. We haven't backed off. We will still do our part,
but it does get frustrating. You feel like you've got your finger in the
dike a lot of the time."

Chernoff has been in charge of the unit for 18 months. He worked drugs in
Alberta for three years.

He said organized crime is heavily involved in grows, but at a long arm's
length.

"The Hells Angels certainly do have a hand in the marijuana trade," said
Chernoff. "We know that's a fact. I would say their role is substantial.

"But the structure is such that you're not going to find any Hells Angels
hanging out in a grow-op. They are going to insulate themselves. There are
several layers of people between the crop-sitter and the person who is
eventually getting the money."

He said the HA and others run the business like a franchise, signing up
low-level criminals to house-sit the plants.

"We've been told by crop-sitters: `They give me a house and they bring me my
groceries. All I do is take care of the plants,'" said Chernoff, adding that
the sitters also get paid when the crop is harvested.

At the next level up, operations get more complicated.

Middle men organize the structure and collect the money. Pot brokers collect
all the marijuana and arrange for it to be shipped out.

"That's all the brokers do," said Chernoff. "If you're growing marijuana,
you must have somewhere for it to go. You have to be tied in to organized
crime, which has the networks set up.

"If you have a 1,000-plant marijuana grow, you're not going to sell it out
your front door at the ounce level."

Chernoff said far more marijuana is grown in the Okanagan than meets local
demand. He said it's shipped across Canada, into the United States and even
overseas.

Chernoff was reluctant to provide details on techniques used in a bust, but
said, as with any investigation, the first step is to get a search warrant.

"This can start with a tip from a concerned citizen or through Crime
Stoppers," he said. "It takes a lot of power to generate a grow, so we might
get our hands on hydro records.

"We can do infrared readings for heat signatures that are conducive to a
grow."

Police may then make neighbourhood enquiries or even sniff for the smell of
marijuana, although they can't go on the property to do that.

Growers often bypass the electric meter, but Chernoff said electric
companies have means to identify excessive consumption before it gets to the
meter. But, he said the electric companies don't always fully co-operate.

"We have some co-operation from the hydro companies. However, they have
their own policies in place," said Chernoff. "They have their legal
departments who advise them that they can't help the police in the way we
would like in using these tools.

"There always seems to be something tying our hands, and we have to find a
way around it. It seems to get tougher every year. There's new loopholes all
the time -- more hoops to jump through."

He said the job is becoming more dangerous because grow-sitters are arming
themselves with handguns and rifles as never before.

"There's a lot of money at stake, and these crop-sitters are worried about
fending off people who try to take their crops," said Chernoff.

"There are people who rip off the growers -- it's their line of business
(and) all they do."

He said automatic weapons generally have not shown up in the Okanagan.

"Your average crop-sitters may not have the means to get their hands on a
gun like that, but if it's a well-structured organization, they may have
access to automatic weapons." said Chernoff.

He said that in Ontario, authorities have found that most of the guns are
coming into Canada from the U.S., where weapons laws are more lax.

Asked whether he had any personal opinions on legalization of marijuana
Chernoff said:

"I don't know if there is a policeman who doesn't give that some thought. I
find that if I try to wrap my head around the bigger social and political
problems surrounding drugs, it's easy to lose focus on what my job is.

"I keep it in simple terms: it's illegal, and it's my job to enforce the
law."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Josh