Pubdate: Wed, 03 Aug 2011
Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS)
Copyright: 2011 The Halifax Herald Limited
Contact:  http://thechronicleherald.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180
Author: Dan Arsenault, Crime Reporter 

POLICE TO STEP UP SEARCH FOR MARIJUANA GROW-OPS

Nova Scotia cops are starting their annual search for outdoor
marijuana grow-ops Thursday.

The RCMP and municipal police will use a helicopter, information from
the public and other means to look for the bright green plants.

This year the police may prosecute growers, unlike other years where
the operation was simply a seek-and-destroy mission.

"We're looking at potential charges if the evidence is there," said
Sgt. Keith MacKinnon of the RCMP. "It depends on the information that
comes in."

From now through September, officers will be searching an average of
20 to 25 sites a day, he said. They expect to find about 300 to 400
plants each day.

Last year, police destroyed 5,700 plants. The biggest grow-op they've
discovered had 9,200 plants in Annapolis County. That was several years ago.

A big part of the operation involves getting information from the
public. Police say marijuana grow-ops are often associated with
organized crime, which brings the risk of violence to communities.
Grow ops are often guarded or surrounded by booby traps, which are
dangerous.

An RCMP release said people should keep their eye out for the three-
to six-foot-tall plants which have the distinctive leaves with seven
jagged fingers.

Some common signs of grow-ops include: abandoned vehicles on side
roads and trails, repeated trips to isolated areas, people trespassing
in isolated areas on foot or ATVs, bags of fertilizer or chemicals and
cleared-out areas in cornfields or wooded areas.

Anyone who wishes to report a grow operation is asked to contact their
local police or Crime Stoppers. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.