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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Cannabis Laced With P Sparking Police Raids On
Title:New Zealand: Cannabis Laced With P Sparking Police Raids On
Published On:2006-03-02
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 14:50:45
CANNABIS LACED WITH P SPARKING POLICE RAIDS ON TINNY HOUSES

The discovery of gangs selling cannabis laced with P to teenagers has
spurred on Auckland police in the war against the cannabis drug trade.

Inspector Jim Wilson, area commander for western and central Auckland,
said 15-year-olds have bought small amounts of cannabis not knowing it
was laced with P (pure methamphetamine).

"It's going right down to the young people - P is highly addictive .
These young people are starting off on cannabis and then they're being
graduated up to methamphetamine, a class A drug," he said. "They think
it's quite innocent to buy it off their local dealer, but that person
has links to the gang scene here in Auckland - it's all coming from
the gangs." He said officers raided three addresses in the past week,
and had made 70 arrests in the past few weeks for possession, supply
and cultivation of cannabis.

"We've been targeting our top list of tinny houses - it's like the
supermarket, it's where all the dealing is done - and knocking them
off," he said.

Mr Wilson's area of command includes the suburbs of Ponsonby and Grey
Lynn through to Balmoral, Avondale and Pt Chevalier.

He said he believed the number of police raids was hurting the gangs'
operations.

He declined to identify the names of the gangs, but said they were
"not a nice bunch".

"One of the tinny houses where we executed a search warrant, they were
turning over $17,000 a week - there's plenty of money to be made in
cannabis," he said.

For $884,000 annually it is easy to see why, when police shut one
tinny house down, another pops up somewhere else.

"Methamphetamine at the moment is getting all the high profile in the
community - and rightly so - but what we're saying is just don't
forget the cannabis trade is alive and well."

Negative effects of the trade, he said, were burglaries, aggravated
robberies and serious assaults.

Mr Wilson said that was why police were appealing to the public to
come forward when they observe suspicious activity at a residence,
including foot traffic or vehicles day or night.

He said people should take note of registration numbers and contact
police.

Information would be treated as confidential.

"It's an ongoing thing and we're not letting up at
all."
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