Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 Source: Press Democrat, The (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Press Democrat Contact: http://www.pressdemo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/348 Author: Michael Coit Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) POT BUST NETS 6,400 PLANTS NEAR SR Property owner discovers five large, terraced plots, complete with irrigation, off Porter Creek Road northeast of city Drug agents hit a home run on opening day of marijuana season, seizing more than 6,400 pot plants with an estimated street value of $2.8 million from a wooded area near Santa Rosa. The haul by the Sonoma County Narcotics Task Force ranks as one of the largest ever in the county. "That's a good, large garden. It's pretty close to the largest," task force Sgt. Chris Bertoli said Wednesday. "A good, solid garden could be several hundred or a thousand plants really spread out and camouflaged well. This was concentrated." No arrests have been made. The discovery, made Tuesday by a property owner walking on his land off Porter Creek Road northeast of Santa Rosa, was an early start to the annual crackdown on outdoor marijuana gardens, Bertoli said. He said authorities will be looking for more outdoor gardens from the air and on the ground as the growing season continues through October. The North Coast is a prime target in the state's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting program. State, federal, and local law enforcement agencies under the direction of the state Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement seized a record 354,164 marijuana plants worth more than $1.4 billion last year, according to the state Justice Department. Mendocino County topped the state with more than 103,000 plants seized, followed by Sonoma County with nearly 40,000 plants seized. Lake County was eighth with more than 18,000 plants seized, the state said. To protect the property owner from possible reprisals from the growers, authorities wouldn't disclose the location of the garden northeast of Santa Rosa. The plants were growing in crop rows on five large, terraced plots watered by irrigation lines tapped into two natural springs. Some surrounding brush and tree cover was removed to improve growing conditions, with enough left to camouflage the site. Rat poison, slug bait and fertilizer were found in numerous containers and draining into nearby springs. Agents didn't find anyone at the site. Two campsites with sleeping and eating areas were found, and agents also turned up shotgun ammunition and a scabbard for a rifle or shotgun. Both the growing techniques and campsites fit the profile of large gardens usually tended by recruits who live for weeks on end near the illegal crops, Bertoli said. "We haven't seen the terraced, hilly tactic for a while. But every once in a while, we will spot them," he said. For every garden authorities find, there likely is another one or two somewhere else, Bertoli said, because growers anticipate losing some to poachers, known as "patch pirates," or law enforcement. Beginning later this month and continuing through October, authorities will fly over the county in helicopters and airplanes several days a week to search for marijuana growing operations. Agents take in between 25,000 and 40,000 plants a year, Bertoli said. "We keep it in check," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh