Pubdate: Sun, 12 Nov 2006
Source: Post-Star, The ( NY)
Copyright: 2006 Glens Falls Newspapers Inc.
Contact:  http://www.poststar.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1068
Author: Don Lehman

AS POT GROWS, SO DO CRIMES

RegionA-s  Farmland Makes Growing Marijuana Easy

The three people burst into the apartment with masks  on, quickly 
overwhelming the woman inside. One held her  down on a bed while the 
others ransacked her home.

The quarry the three robbers sought at the Lake Luzerne  home that 
warm June night was marijuana and/or the cash  that was generated by 
its sale. They made off with a  little of both, police said, and were 
arrested within  the last few weeks.

The June 8 heist was one of two home invasion robberies  in the Glens 
Falls area that night. And when police  investigate home invasion 
heists these days, they  typically find the root of the case to be on 
one drug  and the money it produces that draw would-be thieves:  Marijuana.

"Historically we've seen more home invasions robberies  for marijuana 
than for any other drug," said Glens  Falls Police Detective Sgt. Lloyd Swartz.

While proponents of the drug argue it should be  legalized and that 
its effects on society are far less  troublesome than so-called 
"harder" drugs like cocaine  and heroin, local police see the trouble 
it causes  daily.

Among the recent problems;

* An August car crash that seriously injured three  teens in Minerva 
was blamed on a teen driver who smoked  marijuana.

* Three Argyle High School students were arrested last  month on drug 
charges in connection with alleged  marijuana sales at the school. It 
was one of four  felony marijuana sale arrests in Washington County 
last  month.

* Local police have raided at least three homes in the  region the 
past two months and found elaborate indoor  growing operations. Most 
recently, police said a Wilton  man was arrested Wednesday on a 
felony charge after 4  pounds of marijuana grown at his home was 
seized. That man was already facing charges in a home 
invasion  burglary in Saratoga Springs.

* A man with a gun forced his way into a West Glens  Falls home last 
month and made off with more than  $1,000 in cash from a reputed 
marijuana dealer.

It all stems from the fact that marijuana is by far the  most 
prevalent drug in the region, and recent school  surveys show the 
area's young people use it more often  than their counterparts in 
other parts of the country.

"Kids tell us its easier for them to get marijuana than  alcohol," 
said David Saffer, executive director of the  Hudson Falls-based 
Council for Prevention.

While the 2006 survey of high school students in Warren  and 
Washington counties by the Council for Prevention  showed a slight 
decrease in drug use, it showed that  52.5 of the high school seniors 
who replied admitted  using marijuana. That compares to a nationwide 
average  of 44.8 percent.

It's no surprise to police.

"I can go out and buy marijuana all day long, it's that  prevalent," 
Cambridge/Greenwich Police Chief George  Bell said. "It's everywhere."

A number of factors play a part in that abundance,  police said.

With tens of thousands of acres in farmland, Washington  and Saratoga 
counties have long been believed to be  among the state's biggest 
producers of illicit  marijuana.

So every fall, pot activity seems to pick up as growers  harvest 
their crops. And instead of having to risk  buying drugs from a 
dealer, users can just grow their  own locally.

"In this area, a lot of people just go out and grow  their own 
stash," Swartz said. "Right now is the big  time of year."

The advent of the Internet has made it possible for  anyone with a 
computer to quickly research how to grow  it. That, said Warren 
County sheriff's Investigator  Kibby French, has led to more people 
experimenting with  growing it on their own.

The Glens Falls region also has a place in the middle  of a national 
marijuana pipeline, thanks to its  proximity to the Northway.

The interstate highway is a major conduit to and from  Indian 
reservations on the Canadian border that  officials believe supplies 
a lot of the Northeast's  marijuana.

State Police and federal agents have seized hundreds of  pounds of 
the drug in recent years and made dozens of  marijuana possession 
arrests at a U.S. Border Patrol  checkpoint in Essex County

In December 2002, that spot on the pipeline may have  played a part 
in the killing of a New Jersey man in a  Saratoga Springs hotel room. 
The victim was a  large-scale marijuana dealer who police believe was 
killed after he crossed one of his suppliers or  partners. No arrest 
has been made.

"It (marijuana trafficking) has become more  sophisticated and much 
more businesslike, with bigger  quantities being sold and younger 
people doing it,"  Warren County Sheriff Larry Cleveland said.

Enforcement

Because it hasn't been deemed as dangerous as drugs  like crack 
cocaine, crystal meth and heroin, local  police don't put as much 
time into confronting the  local marijuana trade as they do with 
so-called "harder" drugs.

"With everything else going on, it's hard for us to  dedicate the 
time to it," French said.

Marijuana's lack of physically addictive  characteristics means it 
doesn't lead to the  high-profile property crimes that addiction to 
crack or  heroin, though.

Police have seen a number of marijuana-related  burglaries and home 
invasion robberies in recent years,  heists motivated by knowledge 
that large-scale dealers  will have either drugs or money on hand. 
And French  said many drug-related thefts go unreported.

"The price has risen so a pound of pot goes for $2,400  to $3,400," 
French said. "They (thieves) know dealers  are going to have either a 
lot of pot or a lot of  money."

Local police do go after marijuana dealers when the  opportunity 
presents itself, particularly when the  dealer is selling to teens or 
moving large quantities.

They have been able to seize a number of big seizures  in recent 
years, including a 92-pound shipment from  Arizona this spring that 
police said was sent to a  Kingsbury man.

Swartz said the Capital District Drug Task Force has  also been 
working to interrupt the flow of marijuana  and cash to and from the 
Indian reservations to the  north.

"We know the money has to move through here on the way  to the 
reservations," he said.

'Blatant'

Saffer, of the Council for Prevention, said surveys  show marijuana 
use among teens doesn't seem to be  increasing.

But he said it seems there's been a rise in "more  blatant use" by 
teens who know the law doesn't bring  serious sanctions.

Those over 16 who possess a small amount of the drug --  generally 
less than an ounce -- for personal use are  typically charged with 
the non-criminal violation of  unlawful possession of marijuana. It's 
as weighty as a  traffic ticket, punishable by up to 15 days in jail 
and a $250 fine.

However, a person under the age of 16 in New York faces  no sanctions 
for possessing a small amount of  marijuana.

Juvenile offenses typically result in a trip to Family  Court or a 
diversionary program for those under 16, but  under state law those 
under 16 can't be charged with  anything less weighty than a 
misdemeanor. Unlawful  possession of marijuana is a non-criminal violation.

Saffer said that's a loophole in the law that is  troublesome

"They're not hiding it because the laws are not very  stringent," he 
said. "The kids know it. They know the  penalties better than we do."

Many don't realize that the marijuana grown and sold  today is far 
more potent than the weed on the street 20  years ago. Growers have 
been able to focus on varieties  with greater concentrations of the 
compound that makes  users high, known as THC.

"The THC content is much higher now," Saffer said.

Hudson Falls Deputy Police Chief Randy Diamond said he  and Swartz 
recently spoke to students at Hudson Falls  High School after a 
district survey found above-average  rates of drug use.

He said they reinforced that marijuana is considered a  "gateway" 
drug that often leads to use of drugs  considered more addictive, and 
tried to get across a  message that it's not harmless, as some believe.

"Nothing good is going to come of it," he said.

MARIJUANA ARRESTS

County 1996 2000 2003 2004 2005

Warren 20 29 23 27 29

Washington 16 21 18 31 14

Saratoga 50 55 149 49 73

Essex 5 17 26 52 18

Statewide 23,189 67,089 50,846 40,591 42,088

Note: The state does not track arrests for unlawful  possession of 
marijuana, the non-criminal charge filed  against those who possess 
small amounts of marijuana.

Source: State Division of Criminal Justice Services
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