16/10/2007 00:00:00
UK: Race laws defeat police crackdown on drug barons
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A police crackdown on cannabis factories run by Vietnamese drug barons
has been scrapped after officers were warned their actions might be racist.
Officers have identified a burgeoning industry which typically operates
out of anonymous rented houses in the suburbs and shires.
They had planned to write to property landlords warning them to look out
for suspicious tenancy applications.
But it is understood at least one force has been found to be in breach
of the Race Relations Act after specifically referring to Vietnamese
nationals in its letters.
The development has infuriated detectives seeking to break the
stranglehold of Vietnamese barons, who control 75 per cent of UK
production of cannabis.
Senior police sources confirmed there has been an "explosion" in
Vietnamese-run cannabis factories over the past year.
Often the whole house will be given over to cultivation of the drug with
a small living area reserved for the "gardener", often an illegal
immigrant, who tends the plants.
Sometimes the gangs rent up to four properties in a row from the same
landlord.
Each house can produce up to four harvests a year, worth up to £600,000.
Electricity connections are often tampered with to offer a free supply
to power the lighting around the plants.
Following a recent crackdown by Scotland Yard, many of the crime
syndicates have relocated out of the capital to rented properties in
places such as Birmingham, Sheffield, Manchester, Nottingham, Leicester
and Derby.
There are now three million cannabis users in the UK and more than 60
per cent of what they use is produced here, compared to just 11 per cent
ten years ago.
According to investigators, the Vietnamese gangs have a distinct
four-tier structure.
There is usually a financial backer, who owns a UK business such as a
nail bar or restaurant.
There is a "consultant" who travels around the country advising people
how to set up a cannabis farm.
Then there is the "gardener", and finally a seller, responsible for
distribution of the drug.
The groups typically launder their vast profits in businesses, vehicles
and property. Links to casinos have been uncovered in the Midlands.
Senior officers believe privately that the Government's decision to
relax the laws on cannabis is the cause of the surge in home-grown
production.
Chief Superintendent Jon House, of South Yorkshire Police, said the
downgrading of the drug from Class B to Class C should be reversed.
He told Police Review magazine that the factories were setting up at an
"alarming" rate.
"My recommendation would be that legislation should be introduced that
would hold landlords accountable," he said.
• Super-strength 'skunk' warning
Home-grown "skunk", the most powerful and harmful type of cannabis, is
flooding our streets, Government scientists have warned.
It accounts for three quarters of the cannabis seized, with 9,460lbs
confiscated in the first half of this year.
"There is now an easy way to grow cannabis in this country because of
the availability of equipment, specialist lighting and a cheap labour
source through foreign nationals," said Dean Ames, head of the Forensic
Science Service's drugs unit.
The potency of skunk, said to be two to three times more powerful than
other forms of cannabis, was a major factor behind Gordon Brown's recent
decision to review the downgrading of the drug from Class B to Class C
in 2004.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=487788&in_page_id=1770
Source:
http://www.ukcia.org/news/shownewsarticle.php?articleid=12909
Author:
Daily Mail via UKCIA
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