Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jun 2008
Source: Eureka Reporter, The (CA)
Copyright: 2008 The Eureka Reporter
Contact:  http://www.eurekareporter.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3289
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids)

SECRET RAIDS NOT TOO SECRET

A trickle of rumors that started on anonymous blogs in recent weeks 
was mostly discounted as a hoax by many of the hundreds of people who 
commented on the posts' warning that a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency 
action was on the way.

Tuesday's raids, which brought a small army of federal agents who 
said they were here to bust a single organized marijuana-growing 
operation focused mostly in Southern Humboldt, weren't the swarm of 
agents rumored to have been planning a crackdown on large-scale 
medical marijuana grow houses and pot dispensaries in Arcata this week.

But it was close.

Wherever the anonymous information on the Humboldt Herald blog came 
from, the timing and accuracy of the anonymous tips turned out to be 
surprisingly accurate -- as the federal official who confirmed the 
operation Tuesday admitted.

"There was some accuracy to the rumors and the dates were pinned down 
pretty well," said FBI Special Agent Joseph Schadler Tuesday.

But as the tempo of the rumors picked up pace last week, an in-depth 
story effort launched by The Eureka Reporter staff to verify the 
rumors proved difficult, as many local law enforcement agencies 
didn't respond to calls and comments from federal agencies left more 
questions than answers.

Calls to the Humboldt County Sheriff's Office were directed to the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation office in San Francisco.

On Friday, FBI spokesperson Patti Hansen wouldn't confirm or deny 
that agents would be in Humboldt County this week, although DEA 
officials told KMUD radio station that the DEA was planning training 
exercises in northern Mendocino County set for this week, including 
flyover missions that might cross over into Humboldt County.

"Our DEA is conducting annual training in the area next week," said 
DEA spokesperson Casey McEnry in an interview Friday. The DEA 
regularly comes to the area to train with other agencies.

As to what agencies would participate in the training exercises, 
McEnry said she wasn't sure which ones planned to attend.

When asked whether the DEA planned to investigate or conduct raids on 
"grow houses" in the area, McEnry said it planned to conduct "aerial 
observation" training exercises.

"Whatever comes of that, I don't know," she said, adding the agency 
couldn't disclose that kind of information anyway.

In Arcata -- whose marijuana grow houses have been in the spotlight 
of recent national media attention -- rumors of an impending drug 
raid spread throughout the community.

At some of the four known medical marijuana dispensaries within 
Arcata city limits, employees were reluctant to comment to questions 
about the rumored raid.

A moratorium on marijuana growing prevents the dispensaries from 
growing their own plants.

The issue of illegal marijuana grow houses in Arcata came to a head 
in fall 2007, when several house fires were a direct result of indoor 
marijuana grow scenes.

In subsequent months, the Arcata City Council and its Planning 
Commission struggled to find remedies that appeased marijuana 
advocates and opponents.

+++

Feds in Humboldt County -- There's precedent

This week's operation that brought 450 federal officers to the county 
wasn't the first time federal law enforcement agents made an 
impressive showing in Humboldt County to target marijuana with 
large-scale, coordinated operations.

A surprise, nearly two-week-long marijuana eradication raid in July 
1990, called "Operation Green Sweep," by an estimated 200 California 
National Guard soldiers and Bureau of Land Management agents sealed 
off approximately 640 acres in the King Range National Conservation 
Area, according to archived Times-Standard articles.

It was reportedly the first operation of its kind in U.S. history in 
which the military assisted in marijuana eradication.

It was reported that the raids were part of a national effort by 
then-President George H.W. Bush to convince Colombian leaders -- 
skeptical of U.S. troops efforts to eradicate drugs in their country 
- -- that the U.S. was serious about eradicating drugs at home.

Residents who witnessed the raids reportedly reacted with outrage and 
anger at the armed soldiers who pointed rifles at residents, which 
led to a lawsuit by the Civil Liberties Monitoring Project that 
resulted in guidelines for drug eradication in Northern California.

The operation netted 11 arrests and 1,408 marijuana plants worth $4.2 million.

Another visit by the DEA in 2003 as part of "Operation Pipedreams" 
and "Operation Headhunter" targeted vendors who sold drug 
paraphernalia across state lines via the Internet, which led to the 
arrest of three Arcata businessmen who owned 101 North Glass Inc.

+++

Federal laws trump state marijuana laws

Pulling out a 215 card won't protect marijuana growers under the 
federal government's laws.

When California voters passed Proposition 215 -- also known as the 
Compassionate Use Act of 1996 -- it allowed medical marijuana 
patients to use "up to three pounds of marijuana per year" and to 
grow up to 99 indoor or outdoor plants at one time.

The U.S. Supreme Court delivered setbacks for the state's medical 
marijuana users in 2001 when it upheld in a ruling that "given the 
absence of medical usefulness, medical necessity is not a defense to 
marijuana prosecution" and again in 2005 when it upheld that the 
federal government can prosecute medical marijuana patients 
regardless of a state's compassionate use laws.

While marijuana is classified federally as a Schedule I substance, 
which means it is listed as having high potential for abuse and no 
medicinal value, the county's lead law enforcement official takes a 
different stance.

"The Humboldt County District Attorney's Office will not prosecute 
patients whose use and possession of medical marijuana are within 
these guidelines," the District Attorney's Office's Health and Safety 
Code prosecution guidelines state.

But the district attorney's policy does warn about potential 
consequences from other agencies.

"Persons using or considering the use of marijuana, its possession, 
transportation or recommendation must be aware that the policies of 
other counties may differ," the document stated. "More significantly, 
the federal government and other states criminalize marijuana and all 
activities associated with its possession, cultivation, use, 
transportation, distribution and sale."

+++

Grower, landlord find common ground

Although they may have different opinions on the enforcement of 
marijuana laws, a local landlord and a local marijuana grower have at 
least one thing in common -- both think grow houses are a big problem 
in Arcata.

For the landlord just outside Arcata's city limits -- LaVina 
Collenberg -- the possibility of DEA agents raiding grow houses in 
Arcata might be a good thing.

She said she had never had any issues with marijuana personally until 
one day she realized she had been duped.

A house she thought she had rented to be a home for a young couple 
and their baby was not that at all, but was being used exclusively 
for growing a large amount of marijuana.

That grow operation caused a fire last September, and since the 
couple's marijuana 215 cards were taped to a wall in the home, local 
authorities could not pursue any charges against the renters -- 
leaving an unsuspecting Collenberg with a bill for $55,000 in damages 
that her house insurance covered.

But if federal agents had discovered the grow operation first, 
Collenberg said her former renters would not have gotten away with 
the damage they caused to her property.

"I don't think we can handle it ourselves; it's not being done," 
Collenberg said. "I'm not against anyone smoking marijuana, but when 
they do it for profit and hurt people, it's horrible. It's all about 
greed and money and they don't care who they hurt."

An Arcata marijuana grower -- who wished to remain anonymous for 
legal reasons -- agreed that grow houses are a problem, but not one 
that the DEA should stick its nose in.

"The DEA going around busting people for small marijuana grows is not 
different than the government busting people for making liquor in the 
1920s," the grower said. "It's not working; it's making no productive 
change. It's not the gateway drug to the problems it is proposed to cause."

The grower, who is also a 215 card holder, said she was not worried 
about being targeted by a raid, since she grows a small number of 
plants in a 10-by-6-foot room in her home and sells excess plants to 
a medical marijuana dispensary for approximately $1,000 per month.

"There's nothing about my situation that would cause a person to 
wonder what's going on," she said of the grow inside her residence. 
"If I were in a position that the PG&E bill was astronomical, the 
windows were covered and the neighbors were irritated -- which I know 
to be the case to many in Arcata -- I think it would lead the DEA to 
your door."

Ultimately, the grower said she thought the local community could 
figure out its troubles with marijuana itself and that if marijuana 
were legal, there would be no need for the DEA to come for a visit in 
the first place.

"Maybe I'm old fashioned," Collenberg said about her stance on grow 
houses. "I just don't think it's right."

+++

Burning down the houses

John McFarland, Arcata Fire Protection District chief, poses just one 
question with regard to the issue: If growing marijuana is so 
legitimate, why is it done so sneakily?

"Everyone knows if you want a 215 card which doctor you go to," 
McFarland said. "The issue of medical marijuana is controversial, but 
we're looking at the safety standpoint of it."

Residential fires in which marijuana grows were contributing factor 
or were present have been on the rise in the past two to three years, 
McFarland said.

"We are trying to build realistic statistics," he said. "It's easily 
half of our structural fires, but our intentions are to come up with 
realistic numbers instead of wild guesses."

McFarland says he doesn't have an issue with medical marijuana, but 
when his firefighters' safety is at risk due to the conditions of the 
home, he's not so easygoing.

In some cases, firefighters' efforts have been obstructed by "severe 
locks, and even concealed or secret doors," McFarland said. "We've 
had to take out a window, only to find that six inches behind the 
drapes is another wall," he said. "The alterations are done behind 
the scenes and not appropriately -- it's just flat luck that they 
don't burn the house down the first day."

In two home fires this year, McFarland said propane and butane 
canisters were present.

"If it was to detonate, it's going to level the structure and 
severely damage and harm the neighbors' homes," McFarland said. "And 
it has implications of a fatal outcome for the firefighters -- this 
is where the fire chief gets concerned."

+++

An 'Eye' on growing marijuana

Like many Humboldt County residents who have watched the blogs, 
Arcata Eye Publisher and Editor Kevin Hoover said last week he was 
"waiting for the big bust-olla to happen."

Hoover, who runs Arcata's weekly newspaper, has felt the brunt of 
some residents' anger recently, as he has given considerable coverage 
to the pot issues over the past year -- even sending letters to 
homeowners of suspected illegal grow houses.

"This has put the fear of God into the existing paradigm here," he said.

Since Hoover started sending "Dear Growhouse Owner" letters in 
mid-May, he's received both praise and death threats. In the past two 
weeks, four local businesses pulled their advertisements from the paper.

But Hoover, who showed a New York Times reporter a suspected grow 
house and was interviewed by various national media outlets, said 
he's simply doing what he loves -- his job.

"I'm just asking questions," he said. "This has predictably been 
misconstrued and interpreted."

The letter informs the recipient that their house may be a grow house 
and that neighbors are concerned, Hoover said. "They give me an 
address, I look up the property owner and I send the property owner a 
letter," he said. "I simply report a fact -- your neighbors are 
worried about pot."

Hoover has received mixed reactions, but most homeowners have been 
thankful, he said. "Three-fourths of the people who own the houses 
have called me and said thanks," he said. "I've heard from three 
people who are very unhappy with me."

The national media attention has put him in the spotlight and angered 
some, but Hoover said he just did what he'd want his sources to do -- talk.

"When I call somebody in my job as a reporter, I'd like them to 
answer my questions," he said.

As far as pot smoking, Hoover could care less.

"We all just wish it was legalized," he said.

But when marijuana cultivation, under the guise of the 215 law, 
brings crime into neighborhoods, Hoover's had enough.

"I don't see how protecting this organized crime business protects 
medical marijuana," Hoover said. "It's corporate now; it's big business."

+++

Politics of marijuana

Arcata City Councilmember Harmony Groves supported Proposition 215 
when it appeared on the ballot in 1999 and said she doesn't think the 
federal government should regulate marijuana grows in Arcata.

But Groves said she recognizes that marijuana cultivation in Arcata 
is a problem and that she knows of residential neighborhoods where 
there are no houses available to rent because they are used to grow marijuana.

She said she doesn't think that's a good thing, but she doesn't want 
the federal government to roll into town and uproot people's lives either.

For her, the pot dispensaries and the grow houses are the 
responsibility of Arcata and Humboldt County, not the federal government.

"It will be unfortunate if the DEA comes into town," she said.

Arcata City Councilmember Paul Pitino, who said the city is making 
progress addressing the grow house issue, thinks the number of grow 
houses being circulated by officials and media is exaggerated.

"A sheet covers a window," he said, "and then you have a grow house."

Councilmember Michael Machi said he doesn't have a problem with 215 
patients converting small sections of homes to grow medical 
marijuana, but he does take issue with houses that are used for 
growing and selling.

"It ruins the housing market," he said, and takes away housing for students.

Machi agreed the numbers of grow houses in the city may not be 
accurate, but said he doesn't want to downplay the severity of the situation.

"It's an issue that we can deal with through our zoning regulations," 
he said. "Even if it's only a few hundred of them -- which is a lot 
- -- it's going to take awhile to clean up that mess."

Machi said he wants people to come to Arcata for what the city has 
done for the Arcata Marsh, the community forest or the trail system.

"I don't want Arcata to be famous for supposedly being taken over for 
marijuana grows," he said.

+++

PG&E not lighting up grow houses for feds

Among the speculations circulating ahead of the raids was that 
Pacific Gas and Electric Co., which supplies power to the homes 
suspected of growing marijuana, tipped off the police to which houses 
held the biggest grows.

A PG&E official said last week that short of a court order, the 
utility company would not go out of its way to provide information to 
anyone or to police.

PG&E spokeswoman Jana Morris said she was unaware of the Arcata grow 
house controversy that had attracted national media attention until 
she received an unusual flurry of Humboldt County media inquiries last week.

Morris said PG&E is not a law enforcement agency and it doesn't 
investigate a customer's unusual or increased electricity usage, and 
she was adamant that the company doesn't share its customer 
information with the public.

"We truly respect our customers' privacy," Morris said. "We take that 
very seriously."

While it wouldn't volunteer customer usage information to another 
person or police, Morris said, PG&E is required under state and 
federal laws to cooperate with law enforcement agencies if the 
utility company is subpoenaed or a search warrant is served.

Morris said she hadn't heard anything about any such a subpoena 
related to Arcata's grow houses, but acknowledged that information 
wouldn't necessarily be known or available for release.

But with the increased focus by the media, and the considerable 
misinformation propagating on area Internet blogs, Morris said there 
are concerns at PG&E over the safety of its workers who live in the 
community and are responsible for walking door to door to read 
residences' meters.

"Our first concern is our employees," Morris said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom