Pubdate: Mon, 17 Feb 2003 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2003 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Bruce Owen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) ASIAN GANGS MOVING IN? Police concerned over big rise in sophisticated grow operations A dramatic rise in the number of sophisticated hydroponic grow operations found in Winnipeg in the last few months is raising concerns among police that an Asian-based criminal group has gained a foothold in the city. It's a beachhead that may have been established with the grudging acceptance of the Hells Angels. Police in Manitoba wouldn't comment at length on the new crime trend, but intelligence reports from both sides of the border indicate that an Asian crime group in British Columbia is operating in Winnipeg and involved in the mass production and export of highly potent marijuana to other parts of Canada and into the United States. The crime ring, believed to be connected to a Vietnamese organized crime group, is suspected of being behind at least six hydroponic marijuana grow operations -- three raided Jan. 31 -- uncovered by chance by Winnipeg police since November. Police have seized more than $3 million worth of pot from these large grow operations, about a quarter of the total amount seized in 2002, according to internal police statistics. (Police seized 6,999 plants, worth $11,641,254 last year.) The grow operations were all found in residential homes in quiet neighbourhoods. Some of the houses had been purchased and some were rented. All were similar in setup; the hydro meter had been circumvented to avoid detection as the house used an inordinate amount of heat and light in the grow operation. "They're set up the same way," said Sgt. Rick Guyader of the Winnipeg Police Service's drug unit. "It's like a signature, like a fingerprint." Police only discovered the grow operations due to tips from suspicious neighbours or because of a fire -- one in north West Kildonan ignited because of the haphazard way in which the operation was set up. Police believe the houses also had something else in common -- they were each inhabited by people hired by the crime group to watch over the marijuana crop. For the most part, the homes had little furniture. The people, or "house-sitters," also had no criminal records and good credit ratings, meaning they had no obvious connection to organized crime. Police sources and interviews with neighbours also indicate the residents kept to themselves, preferring not to let anyone into the home or interact with the community. What's puzzling is that the crime group -- it does not have a known name -- is operating under the nose of the Manitoba chapter of the Hells Angels, who are also believed to be involved in the production and distribution of hydroponic marijuana throughout the province and northwestern Ontario. Police intelligence reports suggest that the Hells Angels in B.C. -- supposedly some of the richest outlaw bikers in the world -- have made peace with Asian criminals to do business without interruption. That means no drive-by shootings or murders. Manitoba's Hells Angels fall under the wing of the B.C. Hells Angels. "There's just too much money to be made," a city police source said. "Are they competing? Sometimes they do. Sometimes they don't. "Right now they're operating independently of each other, but there may be a time they come into conflict with one another." Such is the case in Calgary, where police are investigating a number of drive-by shootings and murders that appear to be connected to a turf war over that city's drug trade. Police say they are keeping a watch over the situation as best they can, but admit they have no idea how many marijuana grow operations have been set up in the city or rural Manitoba. Winnipeg police recently added a new segment to its Web site (http://www.city.winnipeg.mb.ca/police/) explaining how to recognize indoor marijuana grow operations and clandestine labs, where methamphetamines, ecstasy, GHB, and other chemically derived drugs are made. "There's a good number of them out there and there's a good number out there we haven't been able to find," Cpl. Bob Ross of the RCMP's drug section said. What police also don't know is whether the Vietnamese crime ring is working in tandem with the Hells Angels. Some reports suggest the two are working together for purely business reasons. Vietnamese gangs are adept at growing dope and the bikers have a strong, almost impenetrable distribution network across Canada and into the United States. Police sources also say the bikers can easily enforce the street trade in narcotics -- crack cocaine is the No. 1 drug in Winnipeg -- but have little control over who's growing marijuana. Thrown into the mix is the fact a number of independent growers are involved in the trade, many of whom are only supplementing their incomes by peddling a small amount of pot. "Through the use of marijuana brokers, the Hells Angels and Vietnamese-based crime groups control approximately 85 per cent of the marijuana production and distribution in B.C.," according to the 2002 Criminal Intelligence Service Canada annual report. "The movement eastward from B.C. of individuals associated (with) Vietnamese-based organized crime groups and involved in marijuana-growing operations will continue, as will the more recent trend of like individuals moving back to B.C. after being charged in Ontario," the report says. "B.C. Hells Angels have had an historical association with traditional (Italian-based) organized-crime families in Eastern Canada and have developed significant criminal alliances. There are also indications of increased collaboration between some Hells Angels and members of Asian-based organized crime groups." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake