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Bloodeagle
01-31-2011, 02:34 AM
Man fined $5,200 for growing cucumbers in basement

(NaturalNews) Mission, British Columbia, resident Len Gratto recently experienced the wrath of local city officials who fined him $5,200 for growing cucumbers in his basement. Under current laws, municipal regulators are permitted to enter premises on suspicion that a homeowner is illegally growing marijuana -- and even if no pot is found, they can levy the fines anyway.

"It's upsetting they can do this," explained Gratto to The Province. "We were growing cucumbers in the basement because they wouldn't take outside."

Several other area residents have been wrongly targeted by officials and levied fines for engaging in legal activities as well, including Stacy Gowanlock who was order to pay roughly $10,000 in fees and "repair orders" because investigators found traces of "dirt" in her basement and "a furnace pipe going up into the chimney, where it should be."

The grow-op bylaw programs used to search properties on the marijuana suspicions state that municipal inspectors can enter homes (http://www.naturalnews.com/homes.html) simply because they use excessive amounts of water. Once inside, there is no requirement that inspectors find any actual evidence (http://www.naturalnews.com/evidence.html) of marijuana -- they are free to levy fines if they determine the presence of what they determine to be "residual" evidence, such as soil or even high mold counts. And if residents fail to comply with the unreasonable orders, they could have their house deemed unsafe and unsellable by local officials.

Gratto, Gowanlock and others have signed on to a class-action lawsuit that says such searches are a violation of citizens' rights. The entire process is a scam, say residents, and they would like to see the program eliminated.

Councilwoman Jenny Stevens told reporters that she no longer supports the program, despite supporting it initially, because at least half of those inspected are innocent. But in the end, they still end up having to pay lofty fines and suffer the embarrassment of having their homes raided as if they were illicit drug dealers, which is ultimately doing more harm than good.

Sources for this story include:

http://www.theprovince.com/news/Mis... (http://www.theprovince.com/news/Mission+homeowner+fined+growing+cucumbers/4083756/story.html)

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/030983_food_freedom_British_Columbia.html#ixzz1Ca2 lKXc8

Peasant
01-31-2011, 02:42 AM
This is the most retarded thing I have ever heard.

Adalwolf
01-31-2011, 02:44 AM
Good to see law enforcement really cracking down here. Because as we all know, those cucumber fiends are complete degenerates who are sending a bad message to our youth! :P

Peasant
01-31-2011, 02:46 AM
It's a gateway vegtable (or fruit if your pedantic) , too many bites and your on your way to being a salad munching vegan. Terrible.

Loki
01-31-2011, 07:05 AM
What a farce. Screw privacy-invading big government!! Who ever would support such idiocy? Time for revolution methinks.

Breedingvariety
01-31-2011, 07:32 AM
It's a part of a wider policy to consolidate food production in the hands of few corporations.

Fortis in Arduis
01-31-2011, 02:03 PM
What was the problem? I could understand if he had prepared them for consumption by pickling.

Just because someone is growing cucumbers, it does not mean that they are intended to be pickled or used for illicit use such as vaginal or rectal insertion. :shrug:

Blackout
08-14-2013, 11:24 PM
Serves this bastard right. Hopefully no one else will grow cucumbers inside their basement!

mr. logan
08-14-2013, 11:50 PM
Real estate doesn´t belong to the person that lives inside. State officers can apply a wide variety of fines. The real world is not tutti frutti.