Pubdate: Sun, 14 Jul 2002
Source: South Florida Sun Sentinel (FL)
Copyright: 2002 South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Contact:  http://www.sun-sentinel.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1326
Author: Peter Franceschina

AS POT GROWERS MOVE INDOORS, POLICE FIND QUALITY IS HIGHER, AND PROFITS, TOO

When Palm Beach County sheriff's narcotics agents began looking into an 
indoor marijuana-growing operation last fall, they had no idea the case 
would lead to one of the largest rings taken down in recent years.

As they investigated, the case got bigger and bigger, surprising even 
seasoned agents with its sophistication, high-quality product and 
mind-boggling profits. Federal prosecutors now calculate the loose-knit 
ring, which had been in operation since at least 1995, pulled in $8 million 
by growing potent strains of pot.

Narcotics agents say the ring members were part of a new breed of marijuana 
growers. No longer are they cultivating large fields outdoors, where law 
enforcement helicopters buzz overhead, insects eat their fill, thieves help 
themselves, and Mother Nature provides less than ideal growing conditions.

Instead, they went indoors, using exacting methods to control the crop and 
maximize their return. By following a formula, agents say, the Palm Beach 
County growers -- who operated in cells allegedly set up by ringleaders -- 
were guaranteed success.

"They had gotten it down to the McDonald's science of it. They would go in, 
set up a house, and move on to the next," said Palm Beach Sheriff's Agent 
Richard McAfee. "They knew what worked and what didn't. So long as you 
followed their ingredients, you were growing some phenomenal dope."

South Florida drug agents say they started seeing an increase in the number 
of indoor marijuana operations in the early 1990s. One reason: The U.S. 
Drug Enforcement Administration, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement 
and local agencies had been steadily busting more outdoor growers for more 
than a decade.

And there was another reason the popularity of outdoor growing diminished: 
rapid development to the west.

"When you take off in a plane from Miami or Fort Lauderdale, you are 
looking at a concrete jungle," said FDLE Agent Rick Ward. "The land is all 
taken out, and you've pushed them indoors."

Marijuana growers also learned they could better hide their crops indoors 
and get a stronger product that fetched far more money than that grown 
outdoors.

"You can grow a better product indoors," said Broward County sheriff's 
narcotics Sgt. Joe Damiano. "You have fewer pests to worry about, including 
law enforcement."

The growers often choose homes that are in isolated areas. But agents say 
they also have found grow houses in cramped apartments. The homes can be 
totally dedicated to the operation, with nearly every room put to use, but 
more often the garage or master bedroom is converted into the grow room.

The growers do what it takes to avoid attracting attention.

"They fit in with mainstream society," Damiano said. "They mow their lawns. 
They will come home at dinner time, to make sure the neighbors see them."

One grow house in the historic Roads neighborhood in Miami was more than 
unusual. Police, acting on a tip about a funny odor coming from the 
two-story duplex, tried to question a man who came out of the house in 
January. He pushed an officer, ran back inside and disappeared.

Police found 120 marijuana plants nourished by an elaborate hydroponics 
growing system -- and a maze of shallow underground tunnels. The suspect 
got away but was arrested two weeks later.

Numbers mixed

Miami DEA spokesman Joe Kilmer said the number of arrests for indoor 
growing has gone up in recent years.

"We are simply seeing a great deal more of them. There is a pretty steady 
increase of them since the late 1990s," he said. "It is an extremely 
lucrative venture."

The number of outdoor marijuana plants eradicated last year was the lowest 
in the two decades the FDLE has been keeping records. There were 210 indoor 
operations busted, compared with 341 outdoor sites, according to the FDLE, 
with a total of 28,206 plants destroyed.

FDLE statistics don't show a decisive trend in the number of indoor busts 
in the last 10 years. In 1989, there were eight. Three years later set the 
record that still stands, with 247 sites discovered. There have been about 
200 indoor operations taken down in each of the past three years.

But FDLE records show that virtually all of the arrests in South Florida 
last year came from indoor operations. Miami-Dade County led the state with 
2,503 plants confiscated, and 49 of the 51 operations were indoors. Broward 
County's four operations uncovered were all indoors. In Palm Beach County, 
only one of the 11 operations discovered was outdoors.

Palm Beach County has seen a spate of indoor operations this year, 
according to McAfee. "Right now off the top of my head, I can think of 10 
that we have done this year," he said.

Potency increases

There is a saying among narcotics agents.

"I've heard this over and over -- `This is not the pot your daddy and momma 
had.' It's a more dangerous drug than was out there in the '60s," said the 
FDLE's Ward. "This is a more refined, higher-grade marijuana with higher 
THC levels."

Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, is the psychoactive component of marijuana 
that produces the "high." The greater the level of THC, the more growers 
can charge for their crops on the street. Compared with ordinary marijuana 
grown outdoors or pot imported from Mexico, which fetches a few hundred 
dollars a pound, indoor marijuana can bring thousands of dollars a pound.

"It is a science to them. They will spend months and months reading 
material. It's also practice to get the perfect plant. It becomes art," 
said Damiano of the Broward Sheriff's Office.

Growers control the amount of light and nutrients given to the plants. They 
control the temperature. As a result, they have sped up the growth cycle so 
they can get four harvests a year, which means more profits compared with 
annual outdoor harvests.

"People who went away [to prison] for years for cultivating, they came back 
and are caught again indoors," Ward said. "You ask them why, and they say, 
`I can create a better product.'"

In years past, THC levels were in the 2 percent to 3 percent range. Ward 
said today's indoor marijuana can reach THC levels of 7 percent to 10 percent.

Buried fortunes

The Palm Beach County growers busted this spring were producing such a 
refined product that it sold for $3,500 to $5,000 per pound, depending on 
the skills of the particular grower, agents say.

The ringleaders allegedly presided over 13 grow houses scattered in 
isolated areas in the northern part of the county, according to federal 
court records. Prosecutors estimate each grow house could generate $400,000 
a year.

One woman arrested with a grow room sectioned off in a barn told agents she 
made $1.5 million in 18 months, according to records, although prosecutors 
haven't been able to find that money. She told agents she paid for a 
child's college tuition and bought a Harley-Davidson and a Dodge pickup 
with her profits. Agents are seeking to have those forfeited.

Prosecutors were so concerned she would use her hidden profits to flee that 
they recently went into court and got a federal magistrate to revoke her bond.

"It's unusual for these types of cases," said U.S. Magistrate Judge Linnea 
Johnson, remarking on how the case had expanded.

The suspected ringleaders hadn't held legitimate jobs in a decade, 
according to drug agents, who think their income came solely from growing 
marijuana. They bought property, a boat and houses with their money, agents 
say, adding they were so proficient that their pot sold at premium prices.

"Their pot was fetching $5,000 a pound. They were in it so long, it was 
just good, good quality," McAfee said.

In the suspects' back yards, agents dug up $2.2 million buried in taped-up 
Tupperware containers. They seized tens of thousands of dollars at other 
grow houses.

"Nobody knew what we were getting into in the beginning of this," McAfee 
said. "They're making so much money. You would never expect something like 
this in a grow case."
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