Pubdate: Fri, 23 Sep 2005
Source: Porterville Recorder (CA)
Copyright: 2005 The Porterville Recorder
Contact:  http://www.portervillerecorder.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2887
Author: Sarah Elizabeth Villicana, The Porterville Recorder
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

OFFICERS CLEAR PAIR OF PARK POT GARDENS

Park rangers dug deep Tuesday to remove more than 1,000 marijuana 
plants from inside Sequoia National Park as law enforcement received 
federal funds to combat drugs in the Valley.

While rangers removed plants from the parks, Tulare County Sheriff's 
Department deputies and personnel from the California Department of 
Justice's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting could be found pulling 
marijuana plants from nearby grow sites on Bureau of Land Management lands.

Both grow sites were found in the canyon of the South Fork and Kaweah River.

Tuesday's operation involved a total of 40 law enforcement officers 
and two helicopters.

Park officials said this was the first eradication action for the 
parks this year, but more are expected through the fall months.

"To protect park resources and public safety, rangers will continue 
to look for and eradicate other grow sites over the next few months 
during harvest season," stated a Sequoia and Kings Canyon National 
Parks news release.

Last year, Sequoia and Kings Canyon removed more than 44,000 
marijuana plants from the parks. An estimated 100,000 plants have 
been removed since 2002.

To collect the most of this year's illegal harvest, the 
multiple-agency Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area 
unit will receive an additional $550,000 this year.

The federal law enforcement coalition, HIDTA, includes officers from 
Tulare, Fresno, Kern, Kings and San Joaquin counties.

The funds were made available through the Office of National Drug 
Control Policy.

"HIDTA is our front-line defense against organized drug trafficking 
in the Central Valley," said Rep. Devin Nunes, who made the 
announcement on Tuesday.

During 2004, the Central Valley HIDTA conducted about 864 
investigations, 314 more than in 2003. Last year, HIDTA officers also 
seized 192,000 marijuana plants and made in excess of 1,100 
drug-related arrests.

Central Valley HIDTA received $2.2 million in federal funding earlier this year.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman