Cheap land may be driving boom in illegal eastern Ontario pot grow-ops - Action News
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Cheap land may be driving boom in illegal eastern Ontario pot grow-ops

Since late July, provincial police have raided and seized about $70 million in cannabis plants, cash and guns from 18 isolated grow-ops across eastern Ontario. It's possible low property values may be enticing organized crime to set up shop in the region.

18 grow-ops raided, 126 people arrested since late July

In late September, OPP raided this sprawling complex of greenhouses on Whitmore Road in Rideau Lakes Township, where they seized some 2000 plants, although some were left behind. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Cheaplandmay be driving a proliferation of grow-opsin rural eastern Ontario, onethat's seenOntario Provincial Police charge dozens of people andseize tens of millions of dollars of illegal cannabisin just over two months.

In that time, the region's seen 18 drug busts that have led to 126 people arrested on charges that they illegally grew cannabis.

Nearly 59,000 plants were seized in the busts an approximate street value of at least $70millionalong with hundreds of kilograms of processed cannabis, guns, cash and production equipment.

Police estimate each plant is worth between $1,200 and $1,400.The raids took place between July 29 and Oct.2,at mostly rural addresses within a few hundred kilometres of Ottawa.

Strange goings-on

At one mid-September bust of a large outdoor operation in McArthursMills, Ont., midway between Bancroft, Ont., and Renfrew, Ont., OPP charged 26 people with growing more than 4,000 cannabis plants and possession for the purpose of selling.

Most said they were from the Greater Toronto Area. Officers also seized 16 rifles, some of them semi-automatic.

Another raidtook place atastatelyfarm on Townline Road in Rideau Lakes Township.

At a mid-September seizure of 4,000 cannabis plants at a grow-op in McArthurs Mills, Ont., provincial police also found more than a dozen firearms, some of them semi-automatic. (OPP)

On Sept. 25, OPP seized 6,500 plants being grown both indoors and outdoors, a high-end sport utility vehicle, generators and a variety of growing equipment.

An aerial photograph taken bypoliceshowed a sprawling outdoor cannabis plantation at the rear of the property.

CBC visited some of the farms and spoke to neighbours who said they were aware of something strange happening.

"It was bizarre, because very frequently we could hear all-terrain vehicles over there,"said Krista Duff, who lives close to the Townline Road grow-op.

Duff said in the spring, the family that had lived there as long as she could remember put the propertyon the market, along with about 35 hectaresof land, for $650,000.

The farm sold quickly,Duff said, and it wasn't long before shesensed big thingshappening next door. She said her family could heara constant drone, which they guessed to be generators, along withsteadyATV traffic to the property's rear.

Duff still hadn't met her new neighbours when one day, OPP aircraft began circling overhead and at least seven police cruisers raced up the neighbours' driveway.

WATCH | An unknowing grow-op neighbour:

Grow-op neighbour reacts to bust

4 years ago
Duration 0:42
Krista Duff didnt know she was living next to a grow-op until the police recently shut it down.

Weed on the wind

CBC News also visited a farm near Lombardy, Ont.,nearly two weeks after OPP raided a vast grow-op there, making arrests, seizing plants and equipment and calling in Hydro One to cut power.

On the afternoon of CBC's visit, a gasoline generator still blared from the farmhousegarage and clothes hung to dry from a makeshift rope secured to a railing.

Neighbour Melissa Dodge said she'd smelled cannabis drifting across the yard and over to her property, which raised her suspicions.

Dodge works at Tweed, the legal cannabis production facility in Smiths Falls, Ont.,and said there was no mistaking the aroma.

"I have to say, it started to smell pretty pungent by late summer," Dodge said.

An OPP aerial image shows the scale of the Townline Road grow-op, one neighbours said they could smell hundreds of metres away. (OPP)

About 10 kilometresaway on WhitmoreRoad, Jacob Kerr soon noticed that the new owners of a farm property abutting his had started building an"absurdly huge" greenhouse.

A title search revealedthe 27-hectare farmwas purchased March 2 by a numbered company based in Markham, Ont, that had been created just two months earlier.

Two days after the sale, the $200,000 mortgage was paid off.

But by Sept.25, OPP had swept in, arresting seven people and seizing more than 2,000 plants, a pickup truck, a backhoe and growing equipment.

Kerr said he watched as township's dump trucks hauledaway hundreds of kilograms of cannabis plants.

"It was kind of comical. You were starting to notice branches of the exposed product flying out, " he said.

A title search also revealed that another drug bust property,just onekilometre from the Whitmore Road bust, had also changed hands last December.

The $345,000 mortgage was paid off in just nine days.

This eastern Ontario farmhouse was purchased this spring and then turned into an alleged cannabis grow-op. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Organized crime involved?

Police declined CBC's request for an interview, but one expert who'sstudied east Asian gangs in British Columbia's Lower Mainland says the scale and sophistication of the operations suggests it was the work of organized crime.

Almost all of the people charged in the busts have east Asian names.

"It's highly likely that these are Chinese investors who've also installed some caretakers," said Simon Fraser University criminologistRobert Gordon.

"There is a lot of mobile capital flowing from the People's Republic of China."

OPP released this image from a grow-op near Killaloe, Ont., where some 8,000 plants, growing both indoors and outdoors, were seized. (OPP)

Gordon said the closure of international borders due to COVID-19 and the opening of legal cannabis markets in Canada has created new profitability concerns forillegal growers.

Legalization has disrupted established patterns of illicit production, Gordon said, and Chinese organized crime is likely tapping into remote, relatively affordable rural farms in eastern Ontario as a meansto keep production costs low.

"There's been a great disturbance in the force that cannot be underestimated," he said.

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