Pubdate: Sat, 03 Nov 2007
Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
Copyright: 2007 The Oregonian
Contact:  http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324
Author: Joseph B. Frasier

OREGON SEIZURES OF MARIJUANA PLANTS DOUBLE IN 2007

PORTLAND, Ore. - It's autumn and the crops are in, but for the
state's marijuana growers, more of what may be Oregon's most lucrative
harvest didn't make it to market.

The Oregon Department of Justice says a record 245,000 plants were
pulled up this year, more than double the 120,000 a year before.

While authorities are getting better at finding where marijuana grows,
said Don Nelson, who tracks the issue for the department, growers are
getting smarter too.

"We're adapting. We're getting more flight time," he said, and added
that Oregon is getting more federal drug enforcement money.

"The backbone of our effort is the helicopters from the Oregon
National Guard," he said, plus better shared intelligence.

"More intelligence equals more marijuana plants," he said, adding that
more flight time likely would do the same.

But intelligence works both ways. The plants are usually identifiable
from the air by pattern and a distinctive shade of green.

"Now they're getting more sophisticated as to how they plant them," he
said. "They plant them under trees and in no real pattern. There might
be 20 plants here and 50 yards away there might be another 40."

The usual growing season runs from May to October, he said, but new
seed is producing plants that can mature in just 90 days.

He said the strength of the Oregon product "is not up there with BC
bud (a powerful Canadian variety) but it's not Mexican ditch weed,
either."

Hunters sometimes find marijuana plots.

"It's a safety thing," Nelson said. "Many of these areas are
boobytrapped, and most of these (growers) are armed."

In September, 18 law enforcement agents moved in on a growing area
near Glendale in Douglas County and thought they found 4,000 plants. A
wider search netted about 10,000 plants weighing 4 tons.

The operation had its own irrigation system, deer nets and booby
traps. But the people minding the crop had fled.

Nelson said those who tend the plants often are illegal immigrants and
that about 30 were turned over to federal authorities this year. More,
he said, may be in county jails.

For an immigrant with few skills and fewer documents, it can be
tempting.

A Jackson County raid this summer netted 32,000 plants plus Jose
Guadeloupe Gomez-Gonzalez, 22. He claimed, at least, that he was paid
$1,500 a day to tend the plants. For a farm worker in rural Mexico,
$6-$7 a day is a good wage.

Northern California remains far and away the heaviest
producer.

"If something shows up in Northern California it's not too long before
you see it in Oregon," said Jackson County Sheriff Mike Winters.

"The (Mexican) cartels are growing it, and if they plant 100 gardens
and 50 get taken off, they still make a lot of money."

"It's 90-10 Mexican cartels," he said of the percentage of Mexican
involvement. "That's who's doing it, that's where the connections
point to and that's what it is."

Local growers don't run the risk of crossing borders, and Winters says
cuts in State Police have turned Interstate 5 into "a pipeline" for
marijuana and more.

For years, he said, "a few gardens slipped under the radar. But we're
getting very aggressive."

He said he plans to meet with sheriffs from southern Oregon and
Northern California to coordinate efforts and often-scant resources.

"They move in in May looking for sites and they're there all summer,"
he said of the growers, adding that environmental damage from
tree-cutting and heavy fertilizer use runs to the hundreds of
thousands of dollars by state estimates.

The U.S. Forest Service no longer helps fund marijuana eradication on
federal land, he said.

Southern Oregon has no lock on the crop, and profits can be
huge.

A mature plant grows to about six feet, said Lt. Curt Strickland, who
heads the Douglas Interagency Narcotics Team. "If you have 1,000
plants you can make $1 million pretty easy."

Major raids were reported this year from Malheur County in Oregon's
southeast corner to the Coast Range, the Siskiyous and the Willamette
Valley.

Yamhill County Sheriff Jack Crabtree said he had never seen a summer
with so much marijuana found in his region.

Nelson said Jackson County led Oregon in confiscation, possibly
because of its proximity to Northern California, where authorities
estimate agents cut down between 1.5 million and 2 million plants last
year and may have missed that many more.

A 2006 report by the Bulletin of Cannabis Reform, which favors
legalization, lists Oregon as the 10th-ranked marijuana-growing state.
Washington comes in fifth. It listed marijuana as the most valuable
cash crop in both states and 10 others.

The figures estimated plantings in Oregon that year at about 967,000
but it is not clear if the doubling of confiscations meant more
plantings, better enforcement or both.

Estimates of the value of the crop are hard to pin down. In Corvallis
this year, authorities estimated that the street-level price for a
pound of marijuana at between $3,000 and $5,000. Sold an ounce at a
time, it can bring much more.

In the ground, estimates may assume all the plants are females, which
contain THC, the active ingredient, while many are males with little
value, the report said.

Strickland and Nelson said pressure on California growers may be
inducing some to move north.

Jackson County, which faces severe budget problems, voted $800,000
this summer for infrared scanners, a new mobile command center and
other gear to help protect deputies entering marijuana grows catch the
growers before they flee. They got no federal help, Winters said.

Catching the growers red-handed is difficult because, he said, many of
them "know the trails out there better than we do."
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MAP posted-by: Derek