HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Green And Legal
Pubdate: Wed, 27 Sep 2006
Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB)
Copyright: 2006, Canoe Limited Partnership.
Contact:  http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135
Author: Cary Castagna, Edmonton Sun

GREEN AND LEGAL

Feds Won't Tell Grow-Op Busters Who's Got A Licence

It's a budding problem cops wish they could weed out.

Officers with the Edmonton Police Service-RCMP Green  Team are 
occasionally raiding marijuana grow-ops that  turn out to be operated 
by growers licensed by the  federal government to cultivate pot for 
medicinal  reasons.

Green Team Det. Clayton Sach wants Health Canada to  provide police 
with a list of government-sanctioned  grow ops.

However, he said, he understands the government's fear  of such a 
list somehow getting into the wrong hands, as  legitimate grow-ops 
would be a target for criminals.

Health Canada spokesman Jirina Vlk says releasing a  list of legal 
pot growers is not possible for privacy  reasons.

Under strict regulations, Health Canada may provide  some information 
to police, but only under specific  circumstances, Vlk added.

"For example, when they are undertaking an  investigation, or when 
they make an arrest and want to  verify the legitimacy of an 
authorization to possess,"  she told the Sun.

But even then, the confirmation - following a call to a  Health 
Canada pager number - is only made verbally.

When police ask for the paperwork to be faxed, they are  denied, Sach said.

Legal growers are issued a laminated card along with a  certificate, 
which they often post on their grow op,  Sach said.

As of September, 1,492 Canadians were authorized to  possess 
marijuana for medical purposes - including 142  Albertans, according 
to Health Canada.

Of those, 1,061 were allowed to cultivate or produce  marijuana for 
medical purposes. Health Canada couldn't  provide a provincial 
breakdown of authorized growers.

When a pot raid turns out to be a bust, it's a waste of  valuable 
police resources and time.

But Sach said detectives usually realize they're  barking up the 
wrong tree just a few hours into an  investigation.

He added the Green Team has run into legit grow ops  "maybe four or 
five times in the last couple of years."

Eric Nash, a 47-year-old certified pot grower in B.C.,  said he's 
never had police kick in his door, but he  sympathizes with others 
who have had to contend with  cops.

"It's unfair to those in the Health Canada program that  are growing 
for medical purposes," he said, adding he  doesn't see any solution 
to the problem.

Among the occasional legal grow-ops that police bust,  some of the 
plant allowances seem to be "excessive,"  Sach noted.

Nash, who, along with his wife, grows 45 plants for two  clients, 
said Health Canada allows five plants for  every gram of marijuana a 
person is permitted to smoke  per day.

So if someone is allowed three grams daily, then they  can have 15 
plants, Nash explained.
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