New Cannabis Chief Tackles Farms

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
A national cannabis co-ordinator has been appointed to tackle the growing problem of drug farms in homes.

The Home Office said former senior police officer Mark Matthews was assessing how many cannabis farms could be operating in England and Wales.

Last year police discovered some 3,000 operations in ordinary houses.

Police chiefs say they can link the industrial nature of the trade to international gangs involved with counterfeiting and people smuggling.

Mr Matthews, a former Merseyside chief superintendent, has spent his first weeks in the job trying to establish how big the problem of cannabis farms has become.

Of the 3,000 farms discovered in the year to March 2008, almost all of them were in ordinary, anonymous homes.

In many cases the farms were discovered only because of suspicious signs of plant cultivation and excessive electricity use, sometimes leading to fires.

Other tell-tale signs include blacked-out windows, mysterious vents or noises from fans and visits to the unoccupied property at random times.

Mr Matthews said tackling the use and trade of cannabis was a particular issue for the police to focus on.

"The harm to neighbourhoods that is increasingly associated with illegal cultivation and trade in cannabis provides a challenge for law enforcement within the United Kingdom.

"The police service is responding to that challenge, with more raids on cannabis farms than we have seen previously and a tougher approach to policing cannabis on the street.

"We now want to step up action against the organised crime networks that are involved in the cannabis trade."

Education campaign

Home Office minister Vernon Coaker told MPs earlier this year that domestic cannabis farms had become "a major worry".

While some farms are amateur operations run by friends, many more are now part of international organised crime with links to South East Asia.

Announcing the appointment, Mr Coaker said: "I want those criminal gangs who are involved in supplying illegal drugs to experience the fact that the UK is a hostile place in which to do business. Whilst cannabis use has fallen in recent years, we know that the market share of skunk has grown."

Looking for clues

Officials have met electricity companies to try to work out if farms can be found more quickly, based on the electricity use being recorded by meters.

Police are also using thermal imaging cameras to detect signs of the heat needed to cultivate thousands of plants inside an ordinary home.

The Home Office announced Mr Matthews's appointment on the same day that an official advisory body to the government began considering calls for ecstasy to be downgraded from a Class A drug.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), which takes expert scientific and medical evidence on their effects, is preparing a report for ministers on the future of the club drug used by 250,000 people a month in England and Wales.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith announced earlier this year that cannabis would be reclassified as a Class B drug, meaning tougher penalties, despite the ACMD saying it should remain Class C.


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: BBC
Copyright: 2008 BBC
Contact: NewsWatch | Contact us | Feedback
Website: BBC NEWS | UK | New cannabis chief tackles farms
 
leave our drug farms alone---go do something else,,,like wash your car, bake a cake,,visit a senior home,,,do something for them,,just STAY AWAY DUDES,,,,F.G.S.,,,,,,aka,,infoman,,,,ohio,,,:peace:
 
These idiots just don'r get it do they. If they were to lockup everyone that is growing in there home they would probably have to lockup 20% atleast of the population. They'll have to do like our idiots here in the US. Just privatize the prison system.
 
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