Pubdate: Thu, 3 Jul 2003 Source: Maui News, The (HI) Contact: 2003 The Maui News Website: http://www.mauinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259 Author: Edwin Tanji, City Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/marijuana+eradication POT SWEEP NETS MORE THAN 15,000 PLANTS WAILUKU -- Maui police, working with state and federal enforcement officers, hauled in more than 15,000 marijuana plants on Maui and Molokai last week, Vice Division Capt. Gerald Matsunaga reported. The eradication effort on Molokai, which brought in nearly 10,000 plants on Wednesday and Thursday, is suspected to have prompted the outbreak of deliberately set brush fires along isolated roads around West Molokai. Capt. Milton Matsuoka, commander of the Molokai District, said officers have been talking "to a bunch of people" in an investigation of the series of six brush fires that began Wednesday afternoon, the same day the marijuana harvesting operation began. While there was no hard evidence to connect the fires with the harvesting effort, Matsuoka said, "Definitely the fires were intentionally set. "Whether they were connected to the harvesting, we can't say. But it sure is a coincidence that they began just as the harvesting began," he said. If the intention was to interfere with the marijuana harvesting, it didn't work. Matsunaga, commander of the Vice Division, said the harvesting effort was able to continue despite the fires. "But they did endanger the community and created a problem for the firefighters who had to work overtime," he said. A Windward Aviation helicopter crashed and was destroyed while helping to fight a brush fire near the Molokai Agricultural Park on Wednesday. The pilot suffered back injuries in the crash. While most of the fires occurred in isolated areas, one of the fires near Kaluakoi Road was fanned into a runaway fire by strong trade winds on Saturday, crossing the Maunaloa Highway and threatening homes at Maunaloa town. Matsunaga said about 20 officers including personnel with the state Department of Land and Natural Resources and from the federal Drug Enforcement Administration assisted in the harvesting. He said the effort was part of an ongoing task force to combat marijuana growing around the islands. The teams hauled in plants ranging in size from seedlings to 7 feet tall, with 5,500 plants collected on Maui and 9,820 harvested on Molokai. He said plants were found in agricultural fields as well as in state forest reserves on both islands. Matsunaga said there were no arrests, but the investigation of the marijuana growing is continuing. He would not comment on whether there were any suspects identified. But he said the areas where marijuana was found had been targeted based on information that police had developed. "We have had intelligence coming in over the past year," he said. He said the Vice Division is not actively involved in investigating the brush fires on Molokai, but officers will be tapping their sources for information to assist Molokai police. At the same time, he said the success of the harvesting effort should have reduced the amount of marijuana available in the community on Molokai and Maui. "It will create an impact in the community, and hopefully it will affect the dealers who are responsible," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk