(1) The court must make a drug premises order declaring residential premises to which an application under section 11D(3) relates to be drug premises if the court is satisfied that:
(a) a dangerous drug has been found at the premises on 2 or more separate occasions within 12 months after a record is made under section 11E(1) in relation to the premises; and
(b) a dangerous drug has been supplied at or from the premises.
(2) On receiving an application under section 11D(4) in relation to commercial premises or liquor licence premises, the court must make a drug premises order declaring the premises to be drug premises if the court is satisfied that:
(a) a dangerous drug has been found:
(i) apparently in the possession of an owner, landlord or tenant of commercial or liquor licence premises or a person employed by or acting for and on behalf of an owner, landlord or tenant of the premises; or
(ii) in a room in the premises to which only an owner, landlord or tenant of the premises, or a person employed by or acting for and on behalf of an owner, landlord or tenant of the premises, has access,
on not less than 2 separate occasions within 12 months after a record is made under section 11E(3) in relation to the premises; and
(b) a dangerous drug has been supplied from the premises.
(3) An order may only be made under subsection (1) or (2) if the court is satisfied that:
(a) records have been made under sections 11E, 11F and 11G of the finding of a dangerous drug on the premises on not less than 3 separate occasions; and
(b) the notices required under those sections to be served on each owner, landlord and tenant of the premises were served on those persons.
(4) The court must specify in an order the area of the premises, specified in the application for the order, to which the order relates.