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Cannabis 'scratch and sniff' cards to help Bath locals spot drug farms

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013
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Emcfarnon

Cannabis ‘scratch and sniff’ cards are to be sent to households in Bath in a bid to help people spot hidden marijuana farms.

The cards, which release the odour of cannabis when scratched, are being sent out by Crimestoppers as part of a campaign to tackle cannabis cultivation in the UK.

  1. Cannabis crimestoppers

    Cannabis scratch cards are being sent to 13 areas of England where the number of marijuana plantations have traditionally been highest, including Avon & Somerset

Police say illegal drug farms are a growing crime – there was a 15 per cent increase in cannabis factories in 2011/12.

It is hoped the cards, which produce the exact smell cannabis plants produce when they are growing, will allow citizens to recognise the odour and call the police if they notice it.

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The cards are being sent to 13 areas of England where the number of marijuana plantations have traditionally been highest - Avon & Somerset; Greater Manchester; Hertfordshire; Humberside; Kent; London; Merseyside; Northamptonshire; Nottinghamshire; South Yorkshire; Suffolk; West Midlands and West Yorkshire.

West Yorkshire police area had the largest number of cannabis plantations uncovered in the UK.

The 'scratch and sniff' card initiative started three years ago in Holland, where 30,000 cards were distributed to homes.

A 2012 report found residential properties in the UK are increasingly being used to grow cannabis plants.

The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) lead for drugs, Andy Bliss, said: “Closing down cannabis farms and arresting the criminals who run and organise them is a key focus in drugs policing.

“This is because we recognise that these farms are often run by organised criminals but also because they bring crime and anti-social behaviour into local communities causing real harm and leaving people feeling unsafe.

“We also know that many people don't realise that the empty, run down house or flat on their street with people coming and going late at night may actually be a commercial cannabis farm. It's not just the stereotype of the remote rural set or disused industrial estate unit.”

Founder and Chairman of Crimestoppers, Lord Ashcroft KCMG PC, said: “Cannabis farms grow more than just drugs. Those who are cultivating cannabis tend to be involved in other areas of crime and are often involved in related gang crime and other violent crimes involving firearms.

“These individuals use violence and intimidation to carry out these crimes and endanger the lives of those around them.

"We want to help put an end to this and the funding that cultivation provides to serious organised crimes like human trafficking and gun crime.”

Crimestoppers Director of Operations Roger Critchell said: "We are distributing ‘scratch and sniff’ cards because not many people know how to recognise the signs of cannabis cultivation happening in their neighbourhood.

“Many are also not familiar with the established links between this crime and serous organised crime.”

Police forces have seized more than one million cannabis plants over the past two years, with an estimated value of more than £200 million.

As a class B drug, supplying cannabis in the UK can lead to a 14 year prison sentence.

Aside from the smell, signs a property is housing a cannabis farm include constantly covered or blocked-off windows; unsociable coming and going at all hours and lots of people visiting; strong and constant lighting day and night and high levels of heat and condensation.

There may also be a constant buzz of ventilation and lots of power cables - gangs dig underground to lay cables which hook up to lamp posts so they don’t have to pay for the enormous amounts of electricity they use.

Crimestoppers is asking members of the public to pass on any information about cannabis farms anonymously by telephoning 0800 555 111 or via its anonymous online form via www.crimestoppers-uk.org.

Both routes are anonymous – names are not taken, calls and IP addresses are not traced or recorded and people do not have to go to court.

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5 Comments

  • Profile image for wheelie_bin

    by wheelie_bin

    Wednesday, March 20 2013, 7:58AM

    “I wonder if the supporters would be so gung-ho about legalising it if a member of their family were killed by a stoned driver?”

  • Profile image for jonquil

    by jonquil

    Tuesday, March 19 2013, 2:59PM

    “Would not more people use it including the young if it were cheaper. I do not think this would be a good idea. It is a drug and the evidence that it destroys a person is obvious when you see a user. Do we really need more people off their heads, the world is being taken over by drugs and alcohol.”

  • Profile image for rogerh3

    by rogerh3

    Tuesday, March 19 2013, 2:49PM

    “Legalise growing it for personal use and there would be no cannabis farms to worry about.”

  • Profile image for DaveBathwick

    by DaveBathwick

    Tuesday, March 19 2013, 2:34PM

    “I wonder how much this exercise is going to cost us and whether there is any data on the number of 'farms' reported as a result. As 'the war on drugs' has consistantly been 'lost' since its inception I wonder how this measure will have any real and lasting impact.”

  • Profile image for MaryD

    by MaryD

    Tuesday, March 19 2013, 11:48AM

    “If there is such a big connection between cannabis and crime, make cannabis legal. Cannabis is only of interest to criminals because the risk of jail raises the prices accordingly.

    If the price of cannabis was not thus artificially inflated, it would be valued as the weed that it is, and criminals could return to their previous occupations.”

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