Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jul 2002 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2002 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Robert F. Moore 20 YEARS OF MARIJUANA FLYOVERS CALLED USEFUL, SAFE Perched in helicopters or small airplanes, pilots and trained spotters have searched fields in North Carolina for more than 20 years looking for marijuana. The flights have resulted in the seizure of more than 82,000 marijuana plants so far this year, according to the N.C. State Bureau of Investigation. Last year there were about 90,000, which ranked fifth in the country. The counterdrug efforts in 2000 -- the most recent year available -- shut down more than 530 marijuana growing operations and also resulted in seizures worth more than $108,200,000, records show. Federal and state officials said the missions are effective and safe. But Wednesday afternoon in Chowan County -- about 240 miles northeast of Charlotte -- three lawmen died when their single-engine plane nose-dived into a cotton field, witnesses told investigators. "These low-altitude missions are safer than general aviation," said Don Edwards, commander of the N.C. Wing of the Civil Air Patrol, which owned the plane. "These guys gave their lives to keep drugs off the street." Killed in the crash were: Charlotte-Mecklenburg police Sgt. Anthony Scott Futrell; Chowan County Sheriff's Deputy Richard Edward Ashley Jr.; and Boone police Maj. Robert Kennedy. They were on an off-duty assignment with the N.C. Wing of the Civil Air Patrol, a civilian auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force. Officials say Futrell, an experienced pilot, was likely flying at at least 500 feet -- the minimum altitude over sparsely populated areas, according to federal regulations. Kennedy, a trained spotter, was looking for marijuana, possibly with binoculars, a digital camera or a slow-motion video recorder. Chowan County Sheriff Fred Spruill said they, along with a two-person crew flying about 3 miles away, were doing aerial surveillance of the entire county. "I've flown on some of the missions myself," he said. "It's safe. I never thought twice about it." A spokeswoman with the national headquarters of the Civil Air Patrol said the agency had 1.54 accidents per 100,000 miles flown in 2001. The rate is five times safer than all other types of aviation combined, she said. Before Wednesday, the agency had not reported a death during a counterdrug mission since two volunteers died in Oregon in 1999. National Transportation Safety Board said Thursday the low-altitude and low-speed flights give the pilot little room for error. The N.C. Wing of the Civil Air Patrol has been conducting reconnaissance flights at the request of state, local and federal law enforcement since 1986, officials said. Similar flyovers are also conducted by the N.C. Highway Patrol aviation unit, the N.C. National Guard and the State Bureau of Investigation. Most of the illegal marijuana plants found in the last two years have been in the less populated central N.C. counties, officials. The tricky flight patterns make the N.C. mountains the hardest area in which to detect marijuana plants, officials say. Spotters can generally detect marijuana from the air based on its distinctive look, officials say. July and August are the peak months for reconnaissance because the plants are at or near maturity and easier to see. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth