The Standard (St. Catharines)

York police charge 60 in alleged $45M drug busts

Licensed cannabis grow-ops used for drug distributi­on

- PETER EDWARDS

TORONTO — Organized criminals in the GTA are exploiting loopholes in Canada’s medical marijuana licensing laws to create massive grow-ops, which finance widespread drug operations, York police said after charging 60 people and allegedly seizing more than $45 million in drugs.

The arrests came out of two parallel York police investigat­ions — dubbed Projects “Zen” and “Moon” — that focused on drug traffickin­g by organized crime groups, some of which were supplying street gangs in the GTA, police said at a news conference in Aurora on Thursday.

“It’s all organized crime,” Det. Insp. Jim Walker of the OPP, who were involved in Project Moon, said in an interview at the news conference, at which drugs, cash and seized firearms were on display.

The busts included the largest fentanyl seizure of its kind in York Region history, police said.

Project Moon, which resulted in 42 arrests, targeted what police call a large-scale synthetic drug network, including Asian organized crime groups and the Parkdale Crips street gang.

The suspects were funding their operations through the production and sale of illicit cannabis by abusing the Health Canada medical licensing system, police said.

They were using large grow-op facilities north of Toronto to produce and distribute drugs including methamphet­amine, ecstasy, shatter and magic mushrooms, police said.

Police said officers seized more than $40 million in drugs, including more than 20,000 illegally grown cannabis plants, more than 560 kilograms of dried cannabis, 23 kilograms of meth, 15,300 ecstasy pills, about four kilograms of magic mushrooms, 400 Viagra pills, $220,000 in currency and four firearms, including a TEC-9 semi-automatic pistol with a silencer.

York police Supt. Mike Slack said criminals are purchasing legally obtained marijuana production permits and using them to start up virtual cannabis farms.

“None of it was going to the legitimate licence owner,” Slack said, noting that some of the product was destined for the U.S.

Project Zen, which resulted in eight arrests, dealt with a Vaughan-based group and followed up on the arrest of a suspect who was allegedly found with more than three kilograms of cocaine in 2018.

Project Zen concluded with the seizure of high volumes of synthetic drugs, including more than five kilograms of fentanyl — what police called York Region’s largest-ever seizure of the drug.

Also seized were 16.5 kilograms of meth pills and more than 56 kilograms of cannabis.

 ?? PETER EDWARDS/TORONTO STAR ?? A York police officer stands near drugs and cash seized in Project Moon and Project Zen. Among the drugs found were 15,300 ecstasy pills.
PETER EDWARDS/TORONTO STAR A York police officer stands near drugs and cash seized in Project Moon and Project Zen. Among the drugs found were 15,300 ecstasy pills.

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