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Pubdate: Sat, 27 Jan 2007 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Authors: John Duncanson, Betsy Powell, Staff Reporters Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) POLICE RAIDS TARGET POT 'CLONES,' GROWING GEAR Probe Hits Local Firm; 9 Arrested and 11 Still at Large Law enforcement's latest salvo against the seemingly endless number of indoor marijuana grow operations across the city involves the arrests this week of a group allegedly selling growing equipment, supplies and the "clones" used to reproduce the leafy, green crops. Police say their nine-month investigation, dubbed Project OClone, shows that, while they're getting better at detecting and taking down grow-ops, they aren't keeping pace with their rapid proliferation. Toronto police say they're averaging a grow-up bust per day this year, after dismantling almost 300 last year. They went undercover during the probe which centred around a company called Can Tech operating on Finch Ave. E. It's there that police allege growers went to get equipment to grow the pot and clones. A related company, Can Tech Distribution, was run from McAdam Rd. in Mississauga, Campbell said. Just a few people ran the outfit, Campbell said, adding those growing pot in homes and apartments likely didn't know the main players or the other growers buying from them. Over the past month, police say, they've shut 39 grow-ops supplied with equipment and clones by Can Tech. In all police seized, 25,766 plants and 11 kilograms of marijuana.Tens of thousand of dollars in allegedly laundered cash were also seized in raids that started Monday. The investigation involved forces from across the GTA as well as the RCMP and Canadian Border Services. So far police have laid more than 50 marijuana and money-laundering charges. "This was a very large bust that's going to affect other people because that product (grow-up supplies) won't be available," said Staff Insp. Don Campbell, head of the force's drug squad. Among the nine arrested are Anna Bui, 40, named on corporation documents as an owner of a Can Tech company. Eleven others are still being sought, Campbell said. Along with plants, equipment and cash, police raiding grow-ops sometimes find young children. In a raid not part of Project OClone probe, officers say they found a six-week-old baby living in an Uxbridge home Wednesday, with 800 drying marijuana plants, about 16 kilograms of pot and two "unsafely stored" firearms. Police estimate the street value of the drugs at $1.2 million. The baby is in children's aid society care while the parents are among seven people arrested at the Zephyr Rd. property, which also allegedly included a separate building with 420 growing pot plants. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake