Pubdate: Fri,  3 May 2002
Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO)
Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.rockymountainnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371

BUNKER HILL POLICE CHIEF NURTURES SEIZED MARIJUANA CROP

BUNKER HILL, Ill.- Police Chief Jesse Cunningham nurtured a crop of tiny 
plants in his office for a month, watering them every 36 hours, keeping a 
light on them and even setting the plants near a window for others to see.

On Thursday, Cunningham delivered his harvest to the Illinois State Police 
crime laboratory. He expects the results to confirm what he already 
suspects: He has been growing marijuana.

"The (Macoupin County) state's attorney said to me, 'I've never heard of a 
police chief growing his own evidence,' " Cunningham said with a chuckle.

The Police Department seized 50 to 60 of the plants March 25 from the 
greenhouse at Bunker Hill High School, where an agriculture student had 
apparently planted the seeds under the guise of growing tomatoes.

Cunningham asked State Police how he could tell whether the tiny plants, 
which had just poked through the soil, were actually marijuana. They 
advised him to raise the plants to maturity, then dry them and bring them 
to the lab for testing, he said.

So that's what he did.

No charges have been filed, pending the results of the tests, but 
Cunningham said the department has already identified the Bunker Hill High 
student who planted the seeds.

"I honestly think the kid just wanted to see if he could get by with it," 
Cunningham said.

Police found out about the plants from the parent of another Bunker Hill 
High student.

As the plants grew, Cunningham said, it became apparent that "they're 
definitely not tomato plants. They look like all the pictures we've got of 
cannabis marijuana plants."

Only about 30 or 40 of the school's 197 students have access to the 
greenhouse, which is used by the school's agricultural classes, Bunker Hill 
Superintendent Michael Cox said.

Cox said he had a hard time believing that the student who planted the 
seeds meant to harvest them.

"I can't imagine that someone was going to do something with them," he said.

But even if this was a prank, Cox said, it will carry serious consequences.

"If we would prove who it was, it would probably warrant expulsion," he 
said. "And we would probably go through the courts to see what else could 
be done, because this is an illegal substance on school property. It's 
big-time."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens