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Manitoba a haven for drug traffickers: RCMP

Young marijuana plants are shown in this Sept. 15, 2009, file photo. Officers seized approximately 30 pounds of packaged marijuana at the location in Winnipeg, said RCMP. (Image courtesy RCMP)
Young marijuana plants are shown in this Sept. 15, 2009, file photo.

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Date: Saturday Jan. 28, 2012 9:32 PM ET

Manitoba is becoming a haven for drug traffickers, marijuana grow-ops and organized crime, one of the RCMP's top officials says.

Police made almost 1,100 drug seizures across the province last year, with many of the "hot spots" in more rural communities like Thompson, Portage la Prairie and The Pas.

That's about double the number from the previous year, RCMP assistant commissioner Bill Robinson said at a media conference in Winnipeg Friday.

Marijuana was the top drug seized, followed by cocaine, prescription and non-prescription drugs and ecstasy.

"You can grow 3,500 marijuana super trees, or super plants, in greenhouses in a rural location versus a small basement in the north end (Winnipeg), where are you going to go?" Robinson said.

More non-residents are being arrested, which means drug crackdowns in other provinces are likely driving criminals to find new locations in rural Manitoba to set up business, he said.

"We've got lots of land. We've got some very isolated locations with old farmyards where people can set up," Robinson said, adding the province's central location and highways makes it ideal for traffickers to move drugs across the country.

The RCMP has made several large seizures in the last few years, putting a dent in drug operations, Robinson said. Mounties are also working with young people to educate them about the dangers of drugs, he said.

One mother at the briefing explained the dangerous nature of the drug trade in the province.

Lori Davis said her son, Chad, was murdered for his involvement in cocaine dealing, where he became addicted to the money and the lifestyle.

"Life as we know it will never be the same. Drugs have taken away our beloved youngest son and left us with a heartache that will never go away," she said. The ashes of her son were in an urn on a nearby table.

Chad was 22 when he disappeared in February 2008. His body was found five months later wrapped in plastic and stuffed inside a barrel that was found in a river about 100 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.

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bigpianoguy
said
0 0

All of the 'behaviours' commonly associated with the use of marijuana, like getting loopy, or cleaning out the pantry and refridgerator are actually only there because of media reinforcement...'oh, I'm high, I guess I have to act THIS way'..I use marijuana (sanctioned by Health Canada) legally as a therapeutic aid for my chronic pain, and I don't indulge in any of those goofy activities. As with any drug, it's certainly not a problem if administered and used properly, like the oxycontin I also have to take to get through the day without screaming. Marijuana has criminal associations because there's not a lot of profit in it, so most dealers will have other substances with a higher profit margin as well as the grass, in their product list. Take it away from the criminal element by legalizing it, & most people will never have access or contact with those other, more damaging substances.


James Kelso
said
0 0

Prohibition is a failed policy. It didn't work with alcohol and it won't work with weed. It was made illegal because of lies. Such as. It's dangerous and will cause mental illness. It was said to have no medical benefits. It was kept illegal because of more lies. It kills brain cells. All proven to be lies. Yet here we are. The fact that is illegal makes it a valuable commodity. Only the cartels, big business, the uneducated and ill informed want it to be kept illegal.


BL
said
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1,100 is a big number and the RCMP will undoubtably use it as justification for more funding. The real question is whether or not this is money well spent. Richard Branson this week spoke to British parliamentarians on the failed War on Drugs as reported on the BBC. His comments are thoughtful and relevant since drug use is a global health issue.


Wpgger
said
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Call me greedy - but I want their tax money!!!! Let's legalize this already!


AF
said
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@Byron: You're right, if marijuana was legalized the criminals growing it wouldn't all of a sudden become law abiding citizens. However if it were a legal business, honest citezens would start selling and then anyone looking to buy wouldn't have to deal with shady characters. Clean taxpaying businesses would aquire all the business and they wouldn't kill there competitors like the gangs currently controling the idustry. Legalizing marijuana is a great way eliminate the violence associated with the trade.


George M
said
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Marijuana saved my life, booze was killing me. After 25 years struggling with alcohol addiction marijuana was the anti-depressant that got me off the booze. During my drinking days the police were at my door almost everyday, I've smoked one joint per day for the past 8 years and the police have had no reason to come to my house in 8 years. Alcohol is an extremely dangerous drug, marijuana is safer than apple pie. With booze you lose with dope there's hope. Some studies in the US say alcohol is involved in 81% of homicides, 73% of felonies, 83% of wife beatings & 67% of child beatings. Booze is the only drug that should be illegal all other drugs are far safer. Prohibition has turned Mexico into a war zone no different than what prohibition of alcohol did. Legalize & tax it instead of wasting billions trying to fight something that will never go away.


Will
said
0 0

Nobody could legitimately support this nonsense. Conspiracy theories to the contrary, there is a reason this garbage is illegal. Wise up.


peter in mb
said
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I think a national referendum would have to be held to legalizing Marijuana. This is an issue like capital punishment or abortion. The Harper government said that they would not change current laws on capital punishment or abortion unless their was a national referendum. Every Canadian gets a vote. Yes or No… It would also have to be regulated in some form similar to the liquor or tobacco acts. Maybe it time that the government opens the floor in the HOC to debate on this subject. After all, there is no harm in talking about it. As a Neo Con I don’t like this idea, however I respect democracy and the will of the people of Canada. ( National referendum, A simple question ,Yes or No.) and let democracy rule


Big Bob in Ottawa
said
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The Bronfmans didn't want alcohol to be legal nor did Capone. Some will avoid taxes on it as they do now with alcohol, but as we all kow it was the IRS that eventually got Capone. Time for the Hells Angels to meet Revenue Canada if you ask me.


BTK
said
0 0

I just want to say Medical marijuana saved my life!


Goldens
said
0 0

Drug use will keep expanding until it causes a breakdown in society. The only salvation is to legalize all drugs and set up a system where those selling outside of the system are still charged. All users must be registered and all purchases immediately recorded and their purchase available to the police. No tax, all profits from the system to be returned as preventive education or rehabilitation. If we do not it will not be long before organized crime is runninng this country.


Susie-Q Mtl.
said
0 0

I know some people who moved out west in 1991. These people like their grass. Thank God they were just acquaintances in passing. I hope they didn't decide to branch out. I think a lot of the bikers left here & went out West. They especially like B.C. for its warm climate.The Prairies would have lots of farms for rent or sale. Barns & other places make for good places to start a grow-op. R.C.M.P. any body?


James
said
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@Alfred: Given that sentencing guidelines are established at the federal level we could expect quite a bit. That's cool though; keep trotting out the NDP boogeyman. It makes it seem like you have a rational, well thought out argument.


Byron
said
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Some of the commenters assume that making pot legal will mean that the pot growers will miraculously turn from greedy people cheating the laws to law abiding citizens reporting their revenues and pay taxes...These revenues are not currently reported and the CCRA does work with the RCMP and charge these people with taxes and penalties... It is ludicrous for commenters to suggest that that if we legalize pot the growers will suddenly go straight and report their revenues from pot growing and trafficking.


Michael from Toronto
said
0 0

Scientists have already proven for some time that a certain percentage of the population is genetically predisposed to becoming addicts. The problem is not the supply or prohibition, the problem is the demand. The problem is the addiction-prone population that is driving demand and resulting in huge social, medical and legal ramifications and liabilities from the effects of addiction. Interdiction is just a short term tactic, long term solution requires curbing the demand, the reasons why certain people are prone to becoming addicts. Solve problems at the roots, not at the fringes.


Prof. Pye Chartt
said
0 0

Governments have no problem preaching the dangers of smoking, drinking, and gambling while happily facilitating usage and enjoyment thereof, and rolling in the glorious taxes and winnings, yet, marijuana still seems to be where the political and ideological hypocrisy takes a sharp turn into the ditch. Hopefully, one day, we'll be able to legislatively implement the obvious common sense that renders our "war" on this natural drug a costly farcical failure.


Paul ~ Kitchener
said
0 0

MANITOBA is a wonderful place to be from ! "WINNIPEG", in itself is a "Sad Story", of a city out of control, in all the social area's. There is no dynamic, strong, invigorating, real active programs to address the many areas of decliine and decay. You don't see any migration into Winnipeg from new immigrants, or other residents of Canada relocating there either. Drugs Alcohol ~ Prostitution ~ Theft ~ all alive and well because of "Failures" by the City Council ~ Police, & Educators, & Provincial Politicians to "GET ACTIVE AND CLEAN IT UP".


Ian Ottawa
said
0 0

Legalizing a drug which impairs a person? That makes as much sense as Vancouver's Clean Injection Sites. Come on people I know that it sounds like a cure but it isn't, Bootlegging was cheaper than what you pay for Government sanctioned cigarettes and alcohol. What needs to be done is make the criminal Pushers and suppliers responsible for the crimes that the addicts cause by doing Hard time with Harder Labour. No country club prison system. I've mentioned before to build prisons in places the prisoner doesn't want to be. Way up North where if they Riot in the summer the windows get opened and the mosquitoes eat them and in the winter if they riot then the heat goes off. After serving time they won't want to commit a crime.


shawbrooke
said
0 0

PhillRC illium Entrepreneurs do not kill people. they do not deal in illegal substances. They do not wreck their places of business. Criminals are not going to abandon their criminal lifestyles because society legalizes the drugs they sell. What they will do is move on to another drug.


Keep pot illegal
said
0 0

The last thing we need is to legalize pot so dope heads can go crazy blowing it in our face everywhere we go. Alcohol is enough of a social ill without capitulating to the pot heads who want to throw open the doors by adding pot to the many social problems we already have with people who can't handle drugs. Keeping pot in check (illegal) is best for society. The cops are not interested in busting dumb pot smokers who want to waste their life away being stoned so the argument about filling up prisons is invalid.


Glen Nelson
said
0 0

This is why laws have to change. Marijuana should be decriminalized. If there is was no money to be made from its sale, say anyone can grow their own, this would greatly take out the criminal activity of it. The money saved from the wasteful spending on trying to enforce present laws could then be better spent on educating people on drugs. Law enforcement would would then be better able to use their time getting the dangerous drugs off the street


James
said
0 0

If someone does do drugs, my advice to them would be don't get caught by the police or an informant. There are much healthier activities that are legal and don't cost you time in jail or prison and all the expenses of trying to get a lawyer etc.


Smartandsafe
said
0 0

All I know is I am so glad I got out of Manitoba - there is so much crime in Winnipeg. Every night someone is getting killed, and it is only a matter of time before you will not be able to walk on the street in the day time without getting shot. People - wake up - you are in the middle of a drug trafficking hot spot and your lives are in danger!! Get out now and sell your property before it is worthless. No one wants to go to that place anymore because it is so violent and drug ridden. Anyone who lives there should get their head examined because you must be crazy to live there with all this happening.


Pip
said
0 0

Look in any patch of bush in southern Manitoba and you will find an ideal place to grow a few plants. As noted in the article, buy up an old farm with associated outbuildings and you have a base of operations, particularly if you run some stock too. How about planting in with a corn crop and hiding several thousand plants in plain sight on a section of land? imagine, at a 4% distribution, that works out to one plant every 240 square yards, or 155,000 per section, a creditable income at $700 per plant, not to mention what they can get for the corn. Criminals have the money to do exactly that. And if we look at the statistics, the rate of crime is diminishing one considers X crimes per hundred thousand. Our population grows by births and immigration daily at a rate greater than deaths. Given the actual numerical increase of crimes caused by population increase, why is there so much opposition to additional policing and additional jail space? Jails built for a population of 25 million ore overloaded when the population is 33 million.


legalize
said
0 0

The war on drugs is a farce and continuing waste of billions upon billions of taxpayer dollars. How much has been spent on this war? what have been the results of this war? After decades and decades, nothing has changed, has it? Putting more people in jail, with longer sentences, will cost taxpayers even more. This war is an utter failure. Keep prohibiton, and organized will thrive, and more lives will needlessly lost be lost. We MUST get the drugs out of the criminal's hands.The jails and prisons are so overcrowed in the US because of prohibition, they are letting people out left right and centre because locking everyone up for pot possession is unsustainable. The same thing will be happening here. you'll never stop the flow of illegal narcotics, especially marijuana. BY legalizing it, at least there will some control over it, there can be govt revenue, and legitimate industry along with legitimate jobs to go along with it.If you can do it with alcohol and tobacco, which are far more devastating drugs, their burden on our health care is immense, why not marijuana/cannabis/hemp?


John
said
0 0

James, I cannot believe the number of people who disagree with you!. It must be marijuana users


PhillRCillum
said
0 0

A select few peoples opinions keep the words "traffickers" from being "entrepreneur". The real crime is tax evasion and tax waste. Al Capone didn't want booze legal. Everyone in Canada should think about all the people they even think have smoked pot at some point, imagine what your life and country would be like if those people were in prison (ALL OF THEM), are all those people hardened criminals in league will mafia and likely to snap at any moment??? I didn't so. Ask an RCMP officer in a isolated area if they would rather have a friendly stranger, a booze baron, or a cult leader walk into their town. I've been in small places when booze is the fuel burning fires in the hearts and minds of people. And I have been there when that friendly stranger shows up, its like night and day.


Mark O
said
0 0

Marijuana is a huge boost to the economy, BC is know around the world for it's bud. Why do you think BC economy is doing so well. I know a building inspector here in Vancouver she said the first year at the job is all she did was inspect grow ops that had been shut down. Illegal drugs are a 200 billion per year industry, we waste about the same amount of money on the war on drugs. In 40 years of the war on drugs use has not decreased. It's cheaper to smoke weed than tobacco but that's due to the fact that chronic pot smokers only smoke about 1 joint a day & tobacco smokers smoke about 20 cigarettes per day. Probably a big reason why tobacco heads die young from cancer & pot smokers don't. Many prescription medication had marijuana exacts in them until the US started the war on drugs. There were no medical reasons for it to be removed from medication but Ronny Ray Gun started the war on drugs that has turned Mexico into a war zone. Prohibition of drugs is far more harmful to society than the drugs. With the exception of alcohol, it causes 3 times more harm than heroin or cocaine, according to a British study that CTV had on this site last year.


QuiggsSK
said
0 0

Well, if you want to be free of drug lords and gang bangers, keeping marijuana illegal is NOT the way to go. Take away their revenue.. decriminalize it's use and legalize it for users to grow their own, problem solved. I understand many do not like the idea of freedom in this country, but if we remove the criminal element of drugs and focus on it as a health issue, we can definitely do better to create a safer more educated society.


Big Bob in Ottawa
said
0 0

I think James is right we should criminalize alcohol again too. Whoever thought that as a society we could manage the detrimental effects of this evil substance anyway? I mean if you compare marijuana to alcohol it's clear that, as a substance, alcohol causes far more harm than marijuana does to society but then people don't like people getting high and eating themselves into a diabetic coma. Alcohol is allowed though and rightfully so if you by the god fearing hypocritical right wing zealots that want to judge the population as a whole and lock up those that disagree with them. I guess they like their beers on Friday but god forbid anyone should smoke a fattie that'd be immoral. Exactly James lets judge everyone that disagrees with us and criminalize them that'll be better for society.


James
said
0 0

Education I think is very important for the youth of Manitoba. Police and Teachers could continue teaching the youth of Manitoba about the harmful effects of drugs. Staying in school and resisting drugs in the first place should be a priority. Drug awareness and school visits by police officers are all good ideas.


alfred
said
0 0

i live in winnipeg, so what can we expect from a HUG-A-THUG ndp government and a revolving door justice system.


GHW
said
0 0

Prohibition of marijuana obviously does not work and I guarantee you, doesn't even slow it down. The only thing Prohibition is accomplishing is costing tax payers millions, using up valuable justice resources and creating underground crime. The only reason it's still illegal is because it's a political hot potato. I don't use the stuff myself but recognize a useless money wasting law that infringes on personal freedoms when I see one. Decriminalize pot, put the same basic laws in place as alcohol and problem solved. With the proper public safety laws in place, if someone wants to use pot, let them. Having said this, I strongly recommend avoiding it, it's nasty stuff. At a minimum it will rob you of your MOJO and worst case it substantially increases risk of lung diseases and death. Seems like a good thing to outlaw but these facts do not change the reality that prohibition does not and will never work.


J in SK
said
0 0

Laws that don't make sense will always be unenforceable. People have always and will always want to smoke pot and use other drugs, despite knowing better -- they are free people with the liberty to decide what to put in their bodies, and the government is foolish to waste so much money on trying to stop what cannot be stopped. Instead, divert that money into producing government-approved quality-assured narcotics, selling them to people who choose to enjoy them, and putting the money into health care, public health services, and addiction services (because people can also choose to get clean). Anything else is to deny our very nature as a species and as a free country.


Ian Ottawa
said
0 0

I consider Winnipeg the Arm Pit of Canada because the City is completely broken. The Social Services are filled with active cases of child abuse and neglect and because well over half are Aboriginal it is a revolving door for the poor children. The crime rate is always near the top of the National average. It is to bad that the hands of the law are tied.


James
said
0 0

Just say "no" to crack. As for marijuana, it should remain illegal for posession and trafficking. The courts need to have tougher sentences for drug traffickers. There is a great life to be had without drugs. Countries like Singapore have the death penalty for offfences involving drugs. Personally, I don't plan on doing drugs. My interest is in politics and how we can make Canada a better country where we do not have to live in fear of drug lords or gang bangers. It is terrible to hear that Manitoba is becoming a haven for drug traffickers.


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