Pubdate: Mon, 15 Aug 2005
Source: Record, The (Stockton, CA)
Copyright: 2005 The Record
Contact:  http://www.recordnet.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Note: Item originally ran in San Jose Mercury News

STATE PARKS ATTRACT POT GROWERS

SAN JOSE -- The farm that stretched across four ridge tops in the
Santa Cruz Mountains contained perhaps a dozen gardens. Along with
thousands of marijuana plants, state agents and sheriff's deputies
found fertilizer, pesticide, spring-loaded rat traps, 6- by 8-foot
water pits lined with plastic, 50-pound bags of topsoil, bags of rice
and beans, and, of course, human waste.

The fabulous climate and open spaces that lure millions of visitors to
California's wilderness every year are drawing marijuana growers, too.
And authorities say Mexican drug cartels have carved out farms even in
some of the Bay Area's most pristine parks.

Along with the potential danger to hikers, hunters and police officers
who run across a carefully guarded "grow," there is the "agricultural
assault" the chemical-intensive farming is inflicting on the fragile
ecosystems of California's back country.

"The violence and the potential for violence are certainly there,"
said Michael Johnson, commander of the state's coordinating agency for
marijuana control. "The grows are larger, and the product is a more
potent and more dangerous drug."

The raid on the well-tended farm in rural Santa Clara County near
Mount Umunhum this month -- during which a state Fish and Game warden
was shot in the legs and a worker at the farm was killed --
illustrated both the dangers and the sheer size of the operations
officials are finding.

It also illustrates the growers' tendency to shift locations when the
heat is on. In 1999, San Benito County led the state in number of
plants seized. In 2003 it was Tulare County, and last year Riverside
County.

Now, perhaps, operations are moving into the South Bay. Last Friday's
raid netted more than 22,000 plants, and it followed a raid in the Big
Basin Redwoods State Park in Santa Cruz County by a day. About a month
ago, there was a raid at Castle Rock State Park.

In 1999, southern San Benito County yielded one of the largest single
pot gardens ever found, with 48,185 plants. "I've got a plaque on my
wall: 'Garden of the Year, Sept. 10, 1999,'" said San Benito County
Sheriff Curtis Hill. Since then, the statewide total has grown from
241,164 plants seized to 621,315.

Officials warn that statistics and anecdotes may reflect only the tip
of the iceberg.

Why has marijuana farming become such a growth industry? And why,
increasingly, is it done in parks, national forests and other public
lands?

"We've always known that smaller marijuana gardens were being grown,
usually for personal use, on public lands throughout the country,"
said Alexandra Picavet, a ranger and spokeswoman for Sequoia National
Park. "But since Sept. 11, 2001, when the borders became more secured,
the problem has most certainly grown. We went from finding 5,000
plants in 2001 to 44,000 last year."

The increased security may have made it cheaper for Mexican drug
cartels to grow pot here than to ship it across the border. In 2004,
80 percent of the plants seized came from gardens believed to be run
by Mexican professionals; those gardens yielded $2 billion worth of
marijuana. That percentage has been fairly consistent since the state
first began keeping those statistics in 2001.

Others cite federal and state laws that let authorities seize and sell
private homes or land involved in the drug trade. But Morgan Taylor,
an assistant district attorney in Santa Cruz County, said the
forfeiture of anything other than cash in a drug case is rare.

There's a much more practical reason not to grow marijuana on your own
land. "Why would you," said Taylor, "if all they have to do is go to
the county records and find out who it belongs to?"

People tend to take a more relaxed attitude toward marijuana than
toward other, "harder," drugs.

"They don't pay attention to the real problem, which is: It's
wholesale agriculture going on in wilderness areas," Picavet said. "It
would be equally offensive if asparagus was being grown, or corn," she
said, calling it "agricultural assault."

How does it assault the land? Let her count the ways: "We've found
evidence of thousands of pounds of fertilizer, miles of irrigation
hose ... herbicides, pesticides, Diazanon a banned insecticide.
They've been damming up creeks. In some places they'll actually pour
their fertilizers right into the creek that's been dammed up and
irrigate straight from that.

"There are miles of trails cut," Picavet went on, "acres of understory
cut, manzanita trees damaged from their putting the gardens under the
trees for camouflage. We've found weapons in every camp we've gone
into, or evidence of weapons, such as bullets or shell casings.
They're leaving behind literally tons of garbage, propane canisters,
human waste, food that's attracting animals. They're poaching animals."
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MAP posted-by: Derek