Pubdate: Sun, 27 Aug 2006
Source: Free Press, The (Kinston, NC)
Copyright: 2006 Kinston Free Press
Contact:  http://www.kinston.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1732
Author: Chris Mazzolini
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

HUGE POT BUST IN ONSLOW COUNTY

Law enforcement officers slog through waist deep water, slashing through 
underbrush with machetes. Eventually they stumble on what they've been 
searching for: a field of thousands of marijuana plants, the home of 
someone's intricate drug production operation.

But this isn't South America. It's Onslow County.

On Thursday, county law enforcement officials cut down about 11,000 
marijuana plants that were growing in a field in the Back Swamp area near 
the Duplin County border. Onslow County Sheriff Ed Brown said his 
department has never before captured so much weed at once.

"This is the most we've ever found in Onslow County," Brown said. "This is 
going to be a major disruption to whoever is selling this."

A North Carolina Highway Patrol helicopter from Kinston spotted the fields 
off Futrell Loop Road at about noon Thursday. That agency contacted the 
State Bureau of Investigation and the Sheriff's Department.

But reaching the crops proved difficult. Heavy rains had flooded the swampy 
area, so officers needed all-terrain vehicles to get to the plots. When 
they did arrive, Brown said they found an extensive operation.

The plants were clustered in disorganized groups so that they would be 
harder to spot from air. There was a tent there, with a work area and 
sleeping mats. Someone dug an outhouse hole. There were farming supplies, 
water and fertilizer.

"It was a major operation," Brown said. "This was not a nonchalant plant a 
seed and go back and get it. This was a business."

While they did not find anyone at the field, some clothing was left at the 
scene and some other items that Brown believes may help law enforcement 
apprehend whoever managed the field. No arrests have been made so far.

"It's going to take a little digging," he said.

Law enforcement officials estimate the marijuana would have eventually been 
worth about $27 million if it would have been harvested and sold on the 
street. The captured cache had an estimated worth of anywhere from $500,000 
to $1 million.

It took officers about five hours to cut down the marijuana with machetes, 
bush axes and weedeaters and then load it into an old military dump truck.

"It took 20 head of us five hours with weedeaters and machetes to get it 
cut down and hauled out," Brown said. "It would have been a good movie scene."

On Friday, officers spent the afternoon sending the plants through a 
chipper and bundling them in burlap sacks to be burned.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D