Pubdate: Tue, 16 Oct 2001 Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Fresno Bee Contact: http://www.fresnobee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/161 Author: Barbara Anderson STORED POT UNLIKELY TO GROW MOLD Finding a life-threatening mold growing on marijuana plants confiscated for evidence in criminal cases would be highly unlikely in the the central San Joaquin Valley, law enforcement officials say. For one, they don't store enough of the plants to be a host for mold. "We only store what is required by the penal code. We take five random samples from a field, for example," says Lt. Don Landers of the Tulare County Sheriff's Department. Sonoma County found a dangerous mold growing on marijuana plants stored in its Sheriff's Department evidence room this fall. Decontamination of the room began this past weekend. A leak in the roof of the evidence room allowed rainwater to come in contact with the plants, said Deborah Phillips, central information bureau manager at the Sonoma County Sheriff's Department. Since the mold was discovered, Phillips said the department is hanging marijuana plants and drying them in a room before they are compressed into a brick and packed in a heat-sealed bag. Any marijuana stored at the Fresno County Sheriff's Department evidence room is dried, said Lt. Robert Hagler. "It's going to be dried marijuana -- not moist marijuana," he said. The department takes photographs of large marijuana busts and then gets a court order to destroy all but a few, small samples, Hagler said. "It's just being practical. We want to keep the storage down." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth