Saturday, 18 September 2010

Lance Armstrong Linked To Performance-Enhancing Drugs In Secret Recording: Report

Lance Armstrong Linked To Performance-Enhancing Drugs In Secret Recording: Report: "Federal authorities have reportedly obtained an important piece of evidence linking Lance Armstrong to performance-enhancing drugs. Greg LeMond (pictured), a three-time Tour de France winner, secretly recorded a telephone call six years ago with a woman close to Lance Armstrong who was in Armstrong's hospital room in 1996 when he told cancer doctors about his use of performance-enhancing drugs"

The Barnstable Patriot - Disposal a different kind of drug problem

The Barnstable Patriot - Disposal a different kind of drug problem: "We are only just beginning to really understand the impact that illegal drugs have on the social fabric of our community. We are also quickly learning about the impact that the improper disposal of pharmaceuticals has on our water quality. So what can we do with our old prescription drugs that we no longer need?
Prescription medicines are not easily disposed. We now know with certainty that we should never flush our unused medicines down the drain. They will ultimately end up in our aquifer. The same is true for leaving old drugs cluttering up the house. In some cases our leftover medicines could very easily end up in the local school yard or on the streets. Leftover containers with pills in them can become an attraction to our kids and grandchildren."

Friday, 3 September 2010

south London street gang arranged to buy £30,000 worth of high-quality skunk cannabis

It seemed like the perfect crime. A south London street gang arranged to buy £30,000 worth of high-quality skunk cannabis from a team of Vietnamese growers that operated several successful “farms” across London and the south-east. The deal was set to take place in a car park close to McDonald's in Sutton, but instead of money, the gang produced hand guns and stole the drugs, safe in the knowledge that their victims, Khach Nguyen and Phac Tran, could never report the incident to the police.

When Nguyen and Tran returned to their Hackney base and told their boss, Hoc Kim Khoa, what had happened, he accused them of faking the robbery and demanded they repay the money. When they refused, the pair were kidnapped and taken to a remote farm in Surrey where, over the space of several hours, Nguyen was slowly beaten to death.

Though the south London street gang has never been found, last month the last of six men accused of Nguyen's murder was sentenced to life imprisonment at the Old Bailey. The disturbing case highlighted not only the ruthlessness of those involved in the trade but also the fact that British gangs are becoming increasingly aware of just how lucrative such operations can be.

When police stumbled across a sophisticated cannabis farm in a railway arch below Leyton Midland Road station in March this year, the high-tech watering system, extractor fans and sodium lights, all powered by electricity stolen direct from the national grid, indicated that they had found a typical Vietnamese-run operation.

In fact DNA and fingerprints found among the £100,000 worth of plants led them to father and son roller shutter manufacturers Stephen and Anthony Coe. Police believe the pair had moved into the drug world on behalf of a far larger gang — who they refused to name — and operated a nursery with plants being moved to larger premises once they reached an optimum size.

“There has been a change over recent years,” says Commander Allan Gibson of the Metropolitan Police, who is the lead officer on cannabis for the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO).

“We're now finding there are more white British people involved — about 60 per cent of the people we identify currently fall into that category. It's a significant change. The nature of the criminality and the ways the criminals organise is changing.”

The gangs concentrate on cultivating strains that grow quickly and produce a more powerful high to give them a product that carries more bangs per buck and can therefore command a higher price. (An “eighth” of skunk — cannabis users have yet to go metric — retails on the street for between £20 and £25, though discounts are available for bulk buyers.) There are no transportation costs, no border controls to evade, and an eager customer base literally right outside the door of each operation — cannabis is by far the most popular and widely consumed illegal drug in the UK.

Set-up costs for a typical operation seemed to vary between £15,000 and £50,000 while annual profits on a single “grow house” run from £200,000 to £500,000. The crops are typically harvested up to four times a year. Special teams arrive at the factories, pull up all the plants and carry them away in laundry bags by dark to other premises where they are dried and bagged up. The Vietnamese gangs will normally sell in bulk to British gangs rather than getting directly involved in street dealing, where the risks of being caught are far higher.

An ACPO report released last month found illicit cannabis factory farmers are arming themselves with sawn-off shotguns, CS sprays and machetes and baseball bats to protect their crops from rival gangs. Police also found hidden weapons, such as a mobile phone fitted with electrodes on the top to shock anyone touched with it, and external booby traps, including one factory gate which had been wired directly to the mains electricity supply.

Most raids are never reported but those that do come to light show why such precautions are considered necessary. Last November, around a dozen members of another London drugs gang travelled to Northampton after getting a tip-off about a cannabis factory that had been set up in an old bakery building and was said to contain 3,000 plants worth more than £1 million.

Fully aware that booby traps may have been set, the gang proceeded to break into the building via the roof. As they began loading dozens of cannabis plants into a waiting van, they found themselves under attack by three Vietnamese “gardeners” who had been locked inside the building to care for the crop. A brawl broke out and quickly spilled into the street, both sides having armed themselves with metal bars, hammers and meat cleavers. Neighbours overheard the early morning commotion and called the police who arrested the gardeners and two of the gang's look outs.

Across the capital, when street gangs come into possession of large quantities of herbal cannabis, local police know the most likely source of the drugs is a raid on a farm. Herbal cannabis, as distinct from the resin form of the drug, is made of the flowers and stalks of mature female plants. Seizures of herbal cannabis have increased fourfold in the past decade as popularity of this variety has grown. Over the past five years at least four “gardeners” have been murdered in London as a result of raids by other gangs. Over the same period the very nature of the cannabis on the streets of the capital has changed out of all recognition. In 2005, just 15 per cent of cannabis consumed in the UK was grown here, the balance being smuggled in from abroad, particulaly Amsterdam. Today the proportion of domestically farmed product had inreased to more than 90 per cent. That figure continues to rise.

This dramatic shift is due almost entirely to the arrival in the UK of organised gangs from Vietnam, who rapidly achieved near-total domination of Britain's marijuana business. The gangs employed a high level of expertise and operated a tried and trusted business model capable of generating vast profits in a short space of time.

The know-how and methodology were imported direct from Vancouver, Canada, where, in the mid-Nineties, Vietnamese gangs took over the cannabis trade previously being run by the Hells Angels. Instead of setting up rural plantations as the biker gangs had done, the Vietnamese focused on turning networks of rented houses in busy residential areas into clandestine grow-ops.

The operations were staggered so that a new crop was ready for harvesting every few weeks. If one house in the network were to be raided, profits from the others would more than cover the loss and it was a simple matter to establish a new farm in a new home. Soon the extended criminal families involved in the trade set their sights on horizons new and identical grow-ops appeared in Australia, Sweden and the UK.

By 2005 the factories were everywhere. In September that year police in Newham shut down 14 of them on a single day and judges at courts south of the river began to complain that they were struggling to tell cases apart as there were so many to deal with.

The gangs began to move out of the capital into suburban areas where police were less familiar with the warning signs, but in recent years they have focused on areas with large numbers of rental properties and transient populations where neighbours are less likely to take an interest in what is going on around them. Those living nearby are stunned when they find out what has gone on under their noses. In 2007, the Met shut 378 factories. Two years later that figure had climbed to 692. Since last April, the Met has already shut down 253 factories.

Many of these latest finds are being run by British gangs, eager to cash in on the seemingly insatiable demand for the crop. In February this year police seized a parcel addressed to a flat in Wanstead which had been found to contain thousands of pounds worth of cocaine. When the property was raided, police found it had been turned into a cannabis factory, with 22-year-old Jerome Smith hiding in the loft space.

Similarly, 45-year-old Thomas Thomas, currently serving 16 years for his part in the £40 million Graff jewellery robbery, had converted his own home into a cannabis factory. Police found dozens of cannabis plants growing under heat lamps in an upstairs bedroom of the three-bedroom house.

Like the Coes, many gangs are setting up in industrial buildings and scaling back some of their domestic operations in order to help them go unnoticed. In the past gangs would try to use every inch of space in a rented house for cultivation, but not now. “They're getting cleverer,” says Lam — not her real name — who works as a translator and has assisted in dozens of court cases involving gangs. “They won't put any plants in the living room, they'll leave the curtains slightly open and have a television on inside. One even had a Christmas tree. It's all about giving out the impression that this is just a normal family home, that nothing untoward is going on inside.”

With landlords wary of Vietnamese clients inquiring about large, isolated properties, many gangs welcome the involvement of British criminals in order to help them obtain suitable premises. Cases involving multiple nationalities are already appearing in courts and police expect this trend to continue. It also seems certain that the violence associated with the trade is set to grow.