Farm workers in cannabis grow-op raids often oblivious to criminal nature, OPP say
CBC
Illegal marijuana grow operations most often crop up on the Ontario Provincial Police's radar in Essex County, and during raids, farm workers are "almost every time" completely unaware of the criminals behind the cannabis, police told CBC News.
Organized crime entities use illegal cannabis grow operations as "easy, quick" cash that's "relatively risk free," according to Det.-Insp. Peter Donnelly, hub commander of the central region's organized crime enforcement branch. That money is then used to traffic harder, illicit drugs such as cocaine, methamphetamines and fentanyl, he added.
"Just the amount of money it gives them access to, that makes it scary," said Donnelly.
Part of his role is to manage the provincial joint forces cannabis enforcement team, which works with local police services. Donnelly said his team specifically focuses on "organized crime and their tentacles that reach into the cannabis market."
It's a mixture of local farm workers and migrant workers who get tangled up in what they believe is a legitimate cannabis operation.
The deception starts when the workers are shown documents stating cannabis is legal in Canada, and sometimes they see a legitimate licence, Donnelly said.
"But what people don't know is these people are far exceeding the scope of their licence, and they have multiple, multiple sites," said Donnelly, who's seen situations where one group may have 40 different illegal cannabis grow locations.
"They're [workers] drawn in to what they believe is a legitimate business. Normally they don't have any idea what they're doing is criminal."
Sometimes the conditions are harsh and difficult, Donnelly said, and in most cases, the workers are "super co-operative" because they were completely oblivious.
"So they're happy to tell the police who they work for, and what exactly they've been doing and how long they've been doing it."
In November, Santiago Escobar, national representative for the United Food and Commercial Workers Union Canada, said he had received calls from migrant workers in such situations.
He said some left what they described as an abusive employer, sought other jobs through a temp agency and were placed in an illegal operation they were told was legitimate.
"These workers told us that they were misled," said Escobar. "These workers are voiceless, abandoned, experiencing many barriers, and due to their precarious status and lack of representation, they are easy targets for these kind of unscrupulous employers and criminals."
He said it can be complicated and overwhelming for migrant workers to be charged criminally in something they thought was legal, and then needing the financial resources for legal representation.