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UK: Police target cannabis factories

Neville Dean, PA

The Independent

Monday 25 Sep 2006

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A national police crackdown on illegal cannabis factories was launched
today.

The operation involves close to 20 police forces in England and Wales
and is expected to last for two weeks.

Cannabis factories will be closed down by police and the criminal
networks who run them disrupted and dismantled.

The Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) is expected to announce
further details of the crackdown later this morning.

Alan Gibson, Acpo's lead on cannabis cultivation, said: "Cannabis
cultivation is an increasing problem which must be nipped in the bud.

"This operation will see police closing cannabis factories across the
country, arresting those concerned and using the Proceeds of Crime Act
to attack the criminal profits being made.

"Cannabis cultivation is seen by criminals as a low risk, high profit
industry, but this operation will send out a clear message that cannabis
production is a serious offence and that offenders will be brought to
justice.

"Not only is the money from cannabis cultivation ploughed back into
serious crime, but the bypassing of the electricity needed to run the
factories causes risk of fire and electrocution and they have already
caused several devastating fires."

As part of the operation, police are expected to ask the public to look
out for telltale signs of cannabis factories being run from properties
in their neighbourhood.

These include the windows of a property being permanently covered,
gardening equipment left outside or a pungent smell emanating from inside.

Earlier this year, police in London began using thermal imaging cameras
to reveal the locations of secret cannabis factories.

The hand-held devices detect the extreme heat caused by the lighting
systems used in the intensive rearing of marijuana plants.

Properties where cannabis is being grown will release ten times the
amount of heat of an ordinary family home.

Each is capable of producing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of
cannabis a year.

A total of 19 police forces are taking part in the crackdown including
Cambridgeshire, Essex, Greater Manchester, Hampshire, Hertfordshire,
Kent, Merseyside, Norfolk, Northumbria, North Yorkshire,
Nottinghamshire, South Wales, South Yorkshire, Surrey, Sussex, West
Yorkshire, Wiltshire and the Metropolitan Police.

The operation, code name Keymer, runs until October 5.

The crackdown is targeting the most potent and potentially form of
cannabis, known as "skunk".

Skunk contains far higher quantities of the chemical THC than herbal or
resin-based cannabis.

In the mid-1990s only around 10% of cannabis in the UK was skunk but in
the last 10 years that figure has risen to around 60%.

Each cannabis plant is capable of producing an ounce and a half of
skunk- grade cannabis and a typical cannabis factory houses between 200
and 800 plants and sometimes as many as 1,000.

A crop of 200 plants could produce as much as £30,000 of skunk every
three months, meaning the larger factories are capable of producing
nearly £500,000 of the drug every year.

Last year, police identified more than 700 cannabis factories in London
alone.

Criminal gangs are attracted to cannabis production because it is seen
as low risk compared with the Class A drug trade.

However, the next two weeks will see police across the country stepping
up raids on suspected cannabis factories and action to dismantle the
networks behind them. Many cannabis factories are run by Vietnamese
gangs, but there are other nationalities involved.

The equipment needed can be purchased legitimately as it is used in
other types of cultivation and a factory can cost as little as £20,000
to set up.

As part of the crackdown, police are asking residents to look out for
tell-tale signs of a factory in their area and to contact them.

Home Office Minister Vernon Coaker said: "We fully support this
crackdown which sends out a powerful message that growing and dealing in
cannabis will not be tolerated.

"Those who use and sell cannabis will face tough penalties: up to 14
years for cultivation and dealing."

Police were searching a suspected cannabis factory at a house in
Dagenham, east London, this morning.

Officers were called to the property last night after reports of people
trying to break in. When they entered they found several rooms full of
cannabis plants.

Detective Inspector Neil Hutchison said he suspected the intruders may
have been trying to steal the plants. He estimated there were around 100
inside, which would have been capable of producing around £15,000 of
cannabis every three months.

Mr Hutchison said cannabis production was "a serious crime" and the
reduction in classification of the drug had not affected the
determination of police to tackle the trade.

He estimated that police were closing around two factories in London
every day.

Asked why cracking down on cannabis production was a priority for
police, he said: "Firstly, skunk is very strong. There is medical
evidence to suggest that it can be damaging to mental health.

"Secondly, it is linked to organised criminality and if organised
criminals are making large amounts of money that is bad for everybody,
not least because they often invest it in other forms of criminality
i.e. Class A drugs.

"Thirdly, it is linked to people trafficking, because a lot of people
who grow the cannabis are illegal immigrants who are brought into this
country to do that.

"Fourthly, it is a public safety hazard. They tap into the electricity
cable prior to it getting to the meter. The properties are festooned
with wires and electrical boxes. They are a hazard, they cause fires.

"Cannabis production is a serious crime. The reduction of the
classification of possession does not in any way affect how seriously we
take the cultivation of the drug."

Skunk cannabis is four to seven times stronger than normal cannabis and
is linked to psychosis, depression and anxiety.

The masterminds behind the factories are "organised gangs with
knowledge, finance and equipment" who are prepared to use violence to
protect their money-spinning trade, according to Metropolitan Police
Commander Allan Gibson, The Association of Chief Police Officers' (Acpo)
lead on cannabis cultivation.

At least three murders have been linked to the trade.

Mr Gibson said: "Skunk tends to be home-grown and is about 60% of the
cannabis available.

"A typical domestic factory will cost about £20,000 to set up and then
can generate about £100,000 to £150,000.

"A very large factory in an industrial or agricultural unit can generate
millions in a year.

"The largest we broke up was generating £8 million a year."

A small factory could have about 200 plants with about 1,000 plants
being grown in a large factory.

Last year, London Fire Brigade reported about 50 house blazes linked to
dangerous makeshift connections to help run skunk factories, Mr Gibson said.

"I don't know about the (fire hazard) figure nationally but you could
probably double it," he added.

 

 

 

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