Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2000 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: DAVID GREEN DOMESTIC POT FARMERS GROWING HIGH-TECH Pot farmers turning to high-tech horticulture Indoor operations a growth industry When a Miami-Dade County doctor decided to plant a tree in his back yard not long ago, he dug a hole. He dug deeper. And then a huge jolt of electricity knocked him onto his back. The cause: His neighbors had needed extra power to operate their massive indoor marijuana farm, so they ran a pirate power line under his back yard. Unlike the doctor, the police were not shocked. They've seen it all when it comes to the ingenuity of home-based pot growers: engineered superplants, computerized "grow labs," organized cultivation rings. Technological advances have made pot-growing a multibillion-dollar industry. And that has spurred police to employ some ingenuity of their own. A host of federal and local agencies recently created a task force to root out pot growers. Last week, its agents raided eight Broward County and Miami-Dade "grow houses," netting five arrests and half a million dollars worth of dope. But so far, operations like this have failed to stem the state's thriving marijuana production. Pot is now Florida's second most popular crop -- second only to citrus. "Money is the bottom line," says Miami-Dade police Detective Rudy Espinosa. "They make more money growing marijuana inside a residence than they do smuggling it into the country." GRASS IS GREENER In the 1970s, most marijuana was imported from Mexico or Colombia. Pot plants in those days were tall -- up to 15 feet -- and had a relatively low level of THC, the chemical that produces the high. Since then, growers have used traditional horticulture cloning and hybridizing techniques to create a master race of pot plants: dwarf versions as small as a tomato plant that produce buds with 35 times the THC level. Last year, agents raided a house in Sunrise where they found plants with 26.5 percent THC. The national record is 30 percent. Rapid advances in hydroponics -- the science of raising plants in nutrient-enriched water instead of soil -- also have helped fuel the explosion. For growers, these developments mean a larger crop of stronger dope in tighter quarters in a shorter time. This has allowed the pot-growing businesses to move behind closed doors -- perhaps even onto your block. "Neighbors always say, `Gee, we never had a clue,' " says Brent Eaton, special agent for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. "It's very difficult to detect." GROWING TREND The newfangled methods may be difficult to detect, but they're relatively easy to execute. Growers rent a house, room or apartment, depending on the size of their crop. They pay in cash to avoid leaving a paper trail. They seal off doors and windows. They install bright lights, timers, humidifiers and air conditioners -- mimicking cycles of day and night, keeping plants at an optimum temperature of 68 degrees. Some rig computers to monitor the environment. This kind of self-regulating system allows them to stay away, returning only to harvest their bounty three months later. Low-tech growers have to come back occasionally to make atmospheric adjustments. With elaborate labs, growers are forced to go to great lengths to conceal their operations. In the case of the Miami doctor's neighbors, they needed a massive air-conditioning apparatus to regulate their 1,400 plants. To cool the system, they ran an underground pipe to the swimming pool behind their rented two-story $350,000 house. They covered the pool's surface with inflatable toys to avoid raising eyebrows. CONNOISSEURS Such innovations have borne fruit. The majority of marijuana smoked in the United States is now grown in North America, the DEA says. About a third of that is grown indoors, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. "We used to catch barge-loads of marijuana coming in -- 20,000 pounds at a time," Eaton says. "That just doesn't happen anymore." The supply boom has created a degree of pot connoisseurship normally associated with wines and cigars. Growers have developed strains of marijuana that taste nutty. Or fruity. There is "blue collar" pot with its relaxing high for menial laborers who want to unwind at the end of the day. There is "white collar" dope that gives its yuppie smokers a peppy buzz. At the Cannabis Cup -- a yearly convention in Amsterdam -- marijuana aficionados swap gardening techniques and seeds. They vote for the world's best dope. Chat rooms devoted to pot-smoking have bloomed on the Internet. Enthusiasts engage in lengthy discussions on equipment, legal strategies and how best to outwit authorities. BOTTOM LINE With the value of high-quality pot now hovering between $2,000 and $6,000 a pound, the unprecedented profit potential has attracted throngs of growers. A decade ago, agents raided eight indoor labs in Florida. Last year, that number skyrocketed to 211, including 54 in Miami-Dade County and five in Broward County. For law enforcement, this has meant changing its tactics. During the 1980s, police became adept at finding outdoor marijuana fields. Trained spotters gazed down from an army of helicopters and aircraft funded by the anti-drug initiatives of the Reagan and Bush administrations. Other agents focused on interdiction. They stepped up anti-drug efforts in Colombia and tightened U.S. borders. Ironically, these very efforts helped drive pot growers indoors. And the indoor operations are much harder to pinpoint. STIFF PENALTIES Not wanting to tip their hand to growers, agents are tight-lipped about their new strategies. They do say, however, that they pay close attention to power usage. Grow rooms require massive amounts of electricity, which utility companies like Florida Power & Light tend to notice and point out to the police. Agents also have been forced to rely more on tips from informants. It was such a tip that led to last week's Operation Green Thumb II. On Feb. 11, a small army of local and federal officers raided hydroponic labs in Hollywood, Pembroke Park, Miami Lakes, Miami Shores and North Miami Beach. They seized 600 plants -- each capable of producing up to a quarter pound of pot. Those arrested in the raid face stiff penalties. Federal law equates pot possession with that of harder drugs. State statutes allow police to charge those caught with any number of plants with a felony. Anti-drug advocates say this is warranted: As pot becomes stronger, they say, so should the punishment for growing it. But others argue that no amount of police work will snuff out the new breed of marijuana growers. "If they bust a thousand people a year growing pot, or 10 thousand, it's still just a fraction," says 33-year-old Kyle Kushman, writer and editor for High Times magazine, chronicler of marijuana culture. "It's never going to go away. "It's been part of every culture. And it always will be." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck