Pubdate: Wed, 17 Jul 2002 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2002 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Stephen Gurr OFFICIALS SEIZE MARIJUANA PLANTS Authorities did a little mid-summer harvesting Tuesday, pulling some 1,600 marijuana plants out of the ground in Oglethorpe and Wilkes counties. No arrests were made, but the Governor's Drug Task force estimated they seized nearly $2 million worth of the green, leafy weed. ''That gives you an idea of the damage done to the pocketbooks of the local growers,'' said state Department of Public Safety spokesman Jim Schuler. At the height of Tuesday's operation, four Georgia State Patrol and National Guard helicopters buzzed the skies, their pilots on the lookout for the telltale light-green color that distinguishes marijuana plants from other foliage. The aircraft took off and refueled at the state patrol's hanger at Athens-Ben Epps Airport ''There's a lot of aviation pilots going home with a headache today after squinting into the sun and looking at treetops all day long,'' Schuler said. The task force, made up of state troopers, Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents, state Department of Natural Resources officers and local law enforcement officers, found some 1,250 plants in nine locations in rural Oglethorpe County, Schuler said. Schuler was unsure of the exact locations of the marijuana plots, and Oglethorpe County Sheriff Jason Lowe was unavailable for comment late Tuesday. Another 32 plants were seized in Clarke County after a pilot spotted them growing behind a Whitehead Road home while returning to the airport about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Athens-Clarke Drug and Vice Unit Mike Hunsinger said. Police and GBI agents executed a search warrant at 115 1/2 Whitehead Road and charged 32-year-old Alan Leonard Gordon with manufacturing marijuana and felony possession of marijuana. Schuler said authorities filled up two ''good-sized pickup trucks'' with marijuana plants, some as tall as 10 feet. They will be burned by local sheriff's authorities -- presumably downwind. Each summer and fall, authorities take to the Georgia skies in search of marijuana plants, a time when the crops are usually coming in. Schuler said the operation will continue in the weeks and months to come. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart