Pubdate: Sat, 13 Sep 2008
Source: Star-Gazette (NY)
Copyright: 2008sStar-Gazette
Contact:  http://www.stargazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1005
Author: Joseph Spector

MARIJUANA BUSTS RISE IN NEW YORK

But In Chemung County, The Number Of Plants Seized Drops.

ALBANY -- Marijuana plant seizures by state police this  year are 
growing, sparked by some major busts in  northern New York.

Seizures of marijuana plants have soared 36 percent  this year as the 
state police Community Narcotics  Enforcement Team credit tougher 
enforcement and greater  collaboration with local police to smoke out growers.

"I think we are being a little more successful," said  Lt. Michael 
Tietz of the Capital Region's narcotics  team.

Although this is also true in most of counties in our  area, the one 
exception is Chemung County where the  number of marijuana plants 
seized between January and  August this year is less than half (156) 
of those  seized in the same period in 2007 (392).

"It varies from year to year," said Chemung County  Sheriff Chris Moss.

He said it is also unlikely that areas where plants  were seized last 
year were producing this year.

"We depend on tips," he said.

Weather conditions also affect marijuana crops that  need sunshine 
and water, Moss said.

A favorite place to hide marijuana plants is in corn  fields, he added.

Late summer and early fall are typically high times for  drug 
enforcement officers to use airplane surveillance  to sniff out 
marijuana farms peaking late in the  growing season.

 From January through August, state police seized 7,097  marijuana 
plants, up from 5,206 for the same period in  2007, state records show.

The biggest busts this year have been in Essex County  in northern 
New York, where police seized 1,987 plants.  The second largest was 
in nearby St. Lawrence County,  where 605 plants were found.

Other counties also have had an increase in seizures.

In Delaware County, plant seizures have hit 191 this  year, compared 
with 46 for the same period last year.

And in Steuben County, seizures grew to 385 this year,  compared with 
173 last year.

State police busts are in addition to recent stings  made by local police.

For example, Seneca County sheriff's deputies found 661  marijuana 
plants Tuesday at several properties.

Law enforcement officials said it's difficult to  explain why some 
areas have had growth in seizures.  Sometimes, it's simply luck.

Last year, for example, state police got a tip of  hundreds of plants 
growing behind a fitness center in  Patterson, Putnam County, and 
swarmed the area to find  ones growing 20 feet high.

"We could have one bust" and the number of plants found  in a county 
could surge, explained state police  spokesman Sgt. Kern Swoboda.

For instance, state police report no marijuana plant  seizures so far 
this year in Monroe County, even though  the county had 165 plant 
seizures during the same  period in 2007 and had 924 plants seized 
for all of  2007.

It's unclear how many of the seizures have resulted in  arrests, and 
some of the reporting to state police  appears spotty.

For instance, police had no records of busts in Putnam  and Rockland counties.

In another measure of how much marijuana is kept from  the streets, 
the confiscation of dried ounces of  marijuana appears to be way down 
so far this year.

Only 39 ounces have been seized by state police this  year, compared 
with 423 ounces during the same period  last year. In 2007, 4,555 
ounces of processed marijuana  were confiscated.

Police said, however, that the amount confiscated is  likely to rise 
as plants are chopped down and harvested  later this year.

Commercial grade marijuana typically sells for $800 to  $1,500 a 
pound depending on the quality and  availability, police said. A 
mature plant can yield up  to a pound.

In the Albany area, the total value of the 2,935 plants  seized this 
year could have been worth $4.3 million on  the street, police said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart