Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jan 2007
Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc
Contact:  http://www.mrtimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372
Author: Danna Johnson

COPS BLAME COP FOR BLOWING BUST

Neighbours are angry and the RCMP are apologetic, but it was a series
of unfortunate happenstances that allowed the purveyors of a Pitt
Meadows pot house to get off with a moving truck full of bud.

Residents of Cedar Lane had known there was something fishy going on
inside the house for months. Since the summer, many had been taking
note of the various cars that would arrive - they'd jot down licence
plate numbers and call them in to local police.

But on Monday, the neighbours got riled when they watched a moving
truck back up to the home, and bags of goods began to disappear into
it. Various neighbours called police, but none arrived.

Eventually, when it appeared police were not en-route, an off-duty
Coquitlam RCMP officer approached the house, went onto the property
and accused one of the men of having a grow operation.

That officer then took photos of what he saw, and of one of the people
he spoke with, with his cellphone camera.

The moment he stepped onto the property, said Ridge Meadows drug
section head Cpl. John McDougall, was the minute the investigation was
compromised.

According to McDougall, Ridge Meadows police were days away from
getting a search warrant for the property. He admits that, by that
time, the pot would have been harvested, but there is a procedure to
follow, he said, and the Coquitlam officer, he added, broke the rules.

"The steps are all lined up for us to go in," he told the
TIMES.

The minute the off-duty officer set foot on the property he violated
the law prohibiting police from stepping onto the property without a
search warrant.

"If he got an admission from the kids saying 'yeah, we have a grow'
all that is not admissible in court," McDougall explained.

"There's a violation of the Canadian Charter Rights," he said. "We've
got to play everything above the law.

As for why the RCMP didn't respond immediately to the call on Cedar
Lane, McDougall said it was just a matter of priorities.

There were 12 marked police cars on the road when the call came in on
Monday and all 12 were tied up with other calls.

And even if they had arrived at the home, McDougall said, there's
nothing illegal about a moving truck driving away from a home.

"It's just too bad the young officer showed up," McDougall said,
adding that his appearance at the home may have been the result of
"peer pressure or of public pressure," or "the act of just doing the
right thing."

Whatever the case, McDougall said, "we're police officers 24/7, not
the minute you hang up your gun belt."

Despite the fact McDougall has since met with the neighbours, they're
still frustrated that it took so long for this grow operation to catch
the attention of the local detachment.

"It just blows me away, though, that they didn't respond when four
guys were there, packing up. They were packing up for about 15
minutes," an angry neighbour told The TIMES.

"It's been going on since June and they're just starting their
investigation," the neighbour continued. "Something's haywire."

Sadly, however, McDougall said that's just par for the course in Ridge
Meadows.

Through 2006, the detachment's six-member drug unit fielded calls of
an estimated 700 separate grow ops within Maple Ridge and Pitt
Meadows. Getting to all of those grows in a timely fashion, said
McDougall, is near impossible.

"We do appreciate all of those people who phone in," he said, adding
that he "doesn't want to discourage those people."

The local officer said that he "feels sorry," that the neighbours are
so upset, and he understands their frustration, but police have to
focus on the operations that have the best chance of leading to
charges and standing up in court.

They can't just bust in on a home willy-nilly without proper
warrants.

As frustrating as it can be for residents whose only concern is
getting the marijuana out of their neighbourhoods, there is a right
way of doing things, McDougall said.

"Even though they're the bad guys they have Canadian Charter Rights.
Those rights protect everyone in Canada. I believe in Canadian rights.
I can't be a hypocrite," he said.

Meanwhile, the Ridge Meadows detachment has not closed the file. Pitt
Meadows bylaw officers will go in to the house to investigate the
electrical system, and, depending on what they find, police may be
able to pursue other charges, including theft of hydro.

"We're not done with the file, but you've got to take the right
steps," McDougall said.
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MAP posted-by: Derek