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Canada

Toronto Totals: 43 Dispensaries Raided, 90 Arrested Over ‘Quality Control’

Bruce BarcottPublished on May 27, 2016 · Last updated July 28, 2020

Toronto woke up to the aftermath of “Project Claudia” this morning to find more than 250 criminal charges leveled against 90 people arrested at 43 medical marijuana dispensaries across the city yesterday.

In a news conference at Toronto police headquarters earlier this morning, Police Chief Mark Saunders said the operation came about as the result of “significant community concern and public complaints” regarding the drastic increase of “unlawful storefronts selling marijuana” in recent months. City officials, he said, had “a genuine health concern” over the “quality control” of the products sold in the dispensaries.

In a protest outside police headquarters prior to the news conference, members of Toronto’s cannabis community denounced the citywide crackdown. “It’s unfathomable because marijuana is a very safe substance,” longtime cannabis activist Marc Emery told the Toronto Sun. “These dispensaries meet the demand of citizens who are there voting with their dollars and their feet to buy. There’s no harm going on, there’s no coercion.”

Marc Emery outside Toronto police headquarters. Photo by Richard Sharp]

Marc Emery outside Toronto police headquarters. Photo by Richard Sharp

Steve Watts, acting inspector with the Toronto Police’s drug unit, laid out the amount of inventory seized yesterday from the 43 dispensaries. It included:

  • Just under $160,000 in cash
  • 269 kilos of dried cannabis
  • 30 kilos of resin
  • 24 kilos of hash
  • 27 kilos of THC pills
  • 72 kilos of chocolate
  • 142 kilos of cookies
  • 129 kilos of candies
  • 64 kilos of sodas and liquids
  • 126 kilos of oils and spreads

Twenty-three grams of powdered cocaine were also seized at one location, Watts said.

There’s an unusual scent inside police hq today. Police setting up display for “project Claudia” pot raid newser. pic.twitter.com/zT0SNFRez9

— Linda Ward (@LindaWardCBC) May 27, 2016

At this morning’s news conference, police officials displayed a monumental amount of merchandise seized at local dispensaries, as law enforcement agencies often do in the aftermath of a gang or illegal gun raid. The items on display are all commonly found in medical marijuana dispensaries in other Canadian cities and throughout the 24 legal medical marijuana states in the U.S.

Where the busts were pic.twitter.com/lOBvvo103e
— Jeff Gray (@jeffreybgray) May 27, 2016

At the news conference, several members of the audience pressed Chief Saunders on the police action. “No harm is being done,” one said. “Where are the victims?” another asked. “You have fifty-some complaints, yet you have tens of thousands of people feeling better.”

“I knew this was going to be a hard decision,” Saunders said, and added that he was not pressured politically to carry out the raids. “I do not want to impede on anyone that wants medical marijuana, but there’s an avenue through which you have to go to do that,” he added, referring to the Health Canada medical marijuana program, which requires patients to purchase only from federally licensed providers. Most storefront dispensaries in Toronto operate without a Health Canada license.

Saunders said he justified the raids based on public health concerns. “You don’t know if you go into one store and you purchase one brownie, muffin or cupcake, how much THC is in this one or that one. You don’t know. You don’t know what the quality control is in the place that made it.” Quality control and proper labeling, he said, were nonexistent.

Enforcing the law and addressing issues of community safety and quality of life is never a waste of time or resources.

— Mark Saunders (@marksaunderstps) May 26, 2016

Those arrested for selling the products without quality control and labeling will face charges — the kinds of charges that traditionally accompany drug crimes, not product labeling errors — that could result in significant jail time. Their first court appearances will be on June 19. Property owners involved in yesterday’s actions could face fines from $25,000 to $50,000.

Tania Cyalume, co-owner of Toronto’s Queens of Cannabis dispensary, protested outside police headquarters this morning. Photo by Richard Sharp

Tania Cyalume, co-owner of Toronto’s Queens of Cannabis dispensary, protested outside police headquarters this morning. Photo by Richard Sharp

As the morning’s news conference unfolded, there was no shortage of outcry by observers, including Toronto residents and cannabis advocates.

Someone please explain how #ProjectClaudia ISN’T a huge waste of @TorontoPolice resources. Serious problems in TO & this isn’t one of them
— Arisa Cox (@arisacox) May 26, 2016

“Raids were done to protect children.” -TPS
“Have any kids been found to ingest weed.”-Media
“We have no data on that.” -TPS#ProjectClaudia

— Jamie MacKinnon (@MacKinnon08) May 27, 2016

Oh my. @Jeffreybgray found out why police called the pot-shop raids “Project Claudia.” pic.twitter.com/SpNKV49muZ
— Selena Ross (@seleross) May 27, 2016

project Claudia went off.. i’m vexed. dealers are rejoicing though https://t.co/1y629De1ed

— Deej (@deejdesign) May 27, 2016

My pal @johnsemley3000 wrote his councillor a pretty kickass letter about #ProjectClaudia: pic.twitter.com/0BwgH43o56
— Jonathan Goldsbie (@goldsbie) May 27, 2016

Caterina Salvatori's post on the Women Grow Toronto Facebook page

Image via Women Grow Toronto on Facebook

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CanadadispensarieslegalizationraidsToronto
Bruce Barcott
Bruce Barcott
Leafly Senior Editor Bruce Barcott oversees news, investigations, and feature projects. He is a Guggenheim Fellow and author of Weed the People: The Future of Legal Marijuana in America.
View Bruce Barcott's articles

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