Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jul 2004 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2004 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Jeff Patterson, Post staff reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) SMOKING OUT POT GROWERS Call it an elaborate game of hide and seek. That's how Kentucky law enforcement officials are describing the patterns of the state's marijuana growers. Police have noticed that areas of high concentrations of marijuana plants are dwindling. More than a decade ago, it was common for police to find about 5,000 plants per plot. Now they'll find 100 plants in 20 different plots, said Capt. Brad Bates of the Kentucky State Police. "It's less risky for growers," he said. Higher prices . Police said Mexican growers like to blend their product with the traditionally more potent Kentucky marijuana, because that brings higher prices. . The street value for one pound of marijuana is now about $1,700. The state's marijuana eradication program has forced growers to use smaller plots and place them in areas where police helicopter flyovers can't see them. In recent years, growers have used public lands, such as state parks, where it's hard to trace who's responsible for marijuana if it's discovered. Bates said the Daniel Boone National Park in eastern Kentucky has become a hotbed for growers. Plants are now commonly found near power lines and underneath tree canopies. The scattering of plants has made it more difficult to find marijuana plots. In a bust in Grant County on May 28, more than $2 million worth of marijuana in 1,000 plants was eradicated by law enforcement officials near a wooded area. Each plot contained 10 to 25 plants, and they were scattered around a 50-acre area, said Jim Liles, director of the Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force. "I think that is what you are going to start seeing," Liles said. In addition to crafty landscaping, growers are planting more in houses, using both soil and hydroponics methods. "They'll do it anywhere they can," Liles said. Indoor-grown marijuana costs more because growers have to cover the cost of water pumps, lights and chemicals. "It's forced the price to go up, which is good," said David James, chief investigator for the Kentucky Attorney General's office. "It makes it harder for people to purchase." With eradication efforts putting a dent in Kentucky production, police are seeing more elaborate importation schemes -- like the one in Owen County in which five people were convicted last week. In that ring, police said more than a dozen people brought in hundreds of pounds of weed from Mexico to Owen County. The middle-aged husband and wife prosecutors said were leaders of that ring were each sentenced to 60 years. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake