Pubdate: Mon, 28 Aug 2006
Source: Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA)
Contact:  2006 The Press Democrat
Website: http://www.pressdemo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/348
Author: Mike Geniella, The Press Democrat

MEXICAN CRIME FAMILIES RUN MOST OF STATE'S POT FARMS

North Coast, State Production Soaring; Sending Workers North Cheaper
Than Smuggling Dope

Illegal marijuana production is surging on the North Coast and across
the state as a result of rising dominance of Mexican crime families
over the state's underground pot economy.

Scores of Mexican nationals are being sneaked across the border to
grow, guard and harvest marijuana gardens inside California because
tightened border security has crimped smuggling of Mexican-grown pot
into the state, according to local, state and federal drug agents.

Mexican-controlled operations now account for as much as 70 percent of
all the marijuana cultivated in the state's rural regions, including
the North Coast, the agents said.

Although multiagency teams are only in the early weeks of their annual
marijuana crackdown statewide, the estimated street value of nearly 1
million pot plants uprooted this summer already equals last year's
record $4.5billion. The number of seized plants in Mendocino, Lake and
Sonoma counties and the Mendocino National Forest account for about 62
percent of the statewide total.

"There's more marijuana than ever growing out there," said Sgt. Rusty
Noe, veteran director of Mendocino County's local anti-marijuana
growing efforts.

Noe said that in Mendocino County twice the number of pot plants -
181,370 - have been pulled this summer compared to last year. The
largest operation so far was a 30,000-plant garden raided Aug. 10 in
the Leggett area.

In Sonoma County, more than 70,000 plants have been uprooted this
summer.

A three-day operation earlier this month near Annapolis on the Sonoma
Coast netted 29,195 plants with an estimated street value of
$51million, according to Sonoma County Sheriff's Sgt. Chris Bertoli.

Pot production is soaring in Lake County, which topped out at No. 2 in
the state last year with 133,441 seized plants . Sheriff Rod Mitchell
said so far this summer 193,000 plants have been uprooted.

"We'll probably break 250,000 plants by the end of harvest," said
Mitchell.

There's so much pot being grown in Mendocino, Lake and Sonoma counties
and the Mendocino National Forest this year that the volume of already
seized marijuana would have been worth $3billion or more on the
street, based on state estimates.

Noe estimates that in Mendocino County up to 70 percent of current
production is under the command of Mexican crime families, some with
ties to the Mexican Mafia.

That mirrors testimony of state and federal agents who've told the
Legislature and Congress in recent months that Mexican drug
traffickers have come to dominate the state's illicit marijuana industry.

Agents say tightened U.S.-Mexican border security has prompted Mexican
operators to underwrite the costs of growing, harvesting and
distributing pot in California rather than face risks associated with
conventional dope smuggling operations across the border.

State Attorney General Bill Lockyer said last month that Mexican drug
traffickers are using marijuana profits "to finance the production and
distribution of methamphetamine" nationwide.

Without the state's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting - a
coordinated effort involving more than 100 local, state and federal
drug agencies - Lockyer said the situation would quickly worsen.

Noe and other drug agents described how thousands of illegal Mexican
nationals are smuggled across the border into rural areas of
California, where their sole purpose is to grow, guard and harvest
marijuana.

Noe said the men are provided guns, food and campsites. They're paid
up to $10,000 cash for their seasonal marijuana work, which typically
runs from April through October, agents said.

Noe said that for the crime families, it's a less risky way of doing
business.

"They've learned that growing dope in rural regions of California is
cheaper than spending millions on ways to smuggle it across the
border," he said.

As a result, the state's marijuana production has largely shifted from
smaller gardens on private property to huge swaths of dope growing
mostly on public lands, including Mendocino National Forest.

To date, 179,116 plants have been uprooted in the forest this
summer.

Mendocino Forest spokeswoman Phebe Brown said illegal pot production
continues to be "a very big problem for us."

Marijuana is even being grown within Yosemite National Park, where a
10,000-plant plantation was discovered last fall.

The potential for big profits from pot gardens is being linked to an
upsurge of violence this summer in marijuana country.

Two members of the Round Valley Indian Tribe were shot and killed June
17 during what Mendocino County authorities believe was a
confrontation in one of a series of pot gardens spread across tribal,
public and private lands north of Covelo.

The gardens were being guarded by five Latinos, four from Santa Rosa
and one from Mexico. The men have been charged with marijuana
cultivation, but so far no charges have been filed in connection with
the killings.

After a 4,000-plant garden was found last week growing in the same
general area, Mendocino Sheriff's Capt. Kurt Smallcomb said he
believed the gardens were part of a larger operation funded by a
Mexican crime family.

Marijuana growers and state experts say a single mature marijuana
plant can produce a half-pound or more of high-grade pot. In the
current underground wholesale market, a pound of pot can fetch $2,500
or more, according to state statistics.

Based on those numbers, 1,000 plants could gross $1.2million or more
in the underground marijuana wholesale market.

Some marijuana advocates downplay the role of Mexican crime families
in today's pot market.

Dale Gieringer, San Francisco co-founder of the California Drug Policy
Reform Coalition, said he doesn't believe the Mexican connection is as
ominous as portrayed.

"Some nationals come in, grow some dope and send home the money to
their families. I think it's probably as simple as that," said Gieringer.

Gieringer said if marijuana were legalized, it would significantly
lessen the huge profits and the presence of criminal elements.

But Noe and other drug agents said the takeover of the state's
multibillion-dollar pot industry by Mexican crime families is real.

Noe said the Mendocino County agency has connected a string of illegal
pot plantations in Mendocino, Lake, Trinity and Shasta counties to a
single Mexican-controlled operation.

"We've uncovered evidence to support that at campsites and in the
course of interviews with a few of the suspects that we've been able
to arrest," he said.

He said multiple pot gardens are the mainstay of large-scale
marijuana-growing operations.

"If one plantation in Mendocino is lost to drug teams, they're still
likely to be growing marijuana across the county line," Noe said.

http://www1.pressdemocrat.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060828/NEWS/608280305

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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake