Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jul 2004 Source: Gilroy Dispatch, The (CA) Copyright: 2004 The Gilroy Dispatch Contact: http://www.gilroydispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3377 Author: Peter Crowley Cited: Drug Enforcement Administration www.dea.gov Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/poppy+plant HUGE OPIUM BUST IN SAN MARTIN SAN MARTIN - Federal drug enforcement agents raided a flower farm on Santa Teresa Boulevard Thursday, seizing 19,000 opium poppy plants. It marked the second bust of illegal poppies in California history, according to U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Richard Meyer. The bulbs of these flowers contain the raw ingredient for heroin, morphine and opium. Farmer Daniel Campos of Watsonville, who was not arrested Thursday, said he was growing the poppies as fresh-cut and dried flowers, not for drug production, and had no idea they were illegal until the federal agents showed up that morning. "They said the levels of these chemicals is a little too high, and it's illegal to grow this poppy," Campos said Thursday afternoon. "If it's illegal, I don't have any problem to destroy it." An anonymous tip to a sheriff's deputy led the DEA to the farm on Santa Teresa Boulevard, just south of Highland Avenue. Five poppy plots, totaling less than an acre, were interspersed amid rows of other flowering plants in the 40-acre field, which Campos rents. About 10 DEA agents and a few sheriff's deputies harvested the illegal flowers as evidence, loading them into two rented trucks. More than 100 poppy varieties exist, but only three are used for drugs - - and are therefore illegal to grow in the U.S. without a DEA permit. The ones in San Martin were the illegal kind, DEA agents determined in a test last week. They immediately sought a federal search warrant, which they served between 7 and 8 a.m. Thursday. They served a second search warrant at Campos' home in Watsonville, where he grows a smaller amount of poppies. It is up to a federal district attorney in San Jose whether to file charges, Meyer said. Meyer said it is possible Campos intended to plant legal poppies. He said none of the San Martin poppy bulbs showed signs of having been cut with a knife to extract the opium sap, which can then be processed into narcotics. Nevertheless, Meyer said Campos didn't have a permit for the illegal poppies, so the DEA had no choice but to seize them. "The law is the law," Meyer said. "Ignorance of the law is not a defense." Campos cooperated with the agents, according to both him and Meyer. "I believe they were expecting to see something else," he said. "They were nice with us. They were doing their job. I am not complaining." At the DEA's request, he said, he destroyed his cut poppies in Watsonville, which had been harvested but not yet sold, and he will soon destroy the unharvested ones at his Watsonville farm. Campos began farming the San Martin field this winter, and this would have been his first poppy crop. He could have sold it for about $10,000 to flower retailers, he said. The unharvested Watsonville crop is worth another $5,000, he added, and the harvested flowers are worth $1,000. As of press time, the DEA had not yet calculated how much heroin could have been made from Campos' crop or its street value. Campos said he hates the social decay caused by drug use. He added the DEA has a lot of work to do if this poppy strain is illegal. Flower farmers all over California are growing the exact same kind of poppy with no knowledge they are breaking the law, he said. "Since I came to United States 20 years ago, they were growing these poppies everywhere," Campos said. "If you go to just about any warehouse in California, you will find these poppy pods - the same poppy pods." He suggested the DEA send a letter to flower growers informing them what poppy varieties to avoid and how to spot them. "We don't want to mess with the government or anybody," he said. "We like to do things right." Told of this suggestion, Meyer said, "That's definitely something we will have to consider." Campos said he has been getting his poppy seeds from his own flowers since he began farming poppies three years ago. He bought the original bulbs from another farmer, he said. Sheriff's Deputy Dan Almquist happened to be the one who answered the phone when the anonymous tip came in early last week. The male caller said the opium poppies growing along Santa Teresa Boulevard matched the ones he had seen on a recent trip to the Middle East. "He said, `I know what I'm talking about. They're just coming into bloom,' " Almquist said. "I asked his name, and he said he wanted to call himself `curious passerby.' " Almquist is a 20-year veteran of the sheriff's office, but opium poppies were new to him. After checking out the field, he asked the DEA to test the poppies. After the lab test, the sheriff's office turned the case over to the DEA. The first opium poppy plant bust was last summer near Yosemite National Park, on public land. Poppy facts More than 100 poppy varieties exist, but only three are illegal to grow in the U.S. without a license from the Drug Enforcement Administration. Illegal drug makers extract milky opium gum from mature poppy bulbs by scoring the bulb with a knife. Morphine is derived by boiling this gum and adding ingredients such as lime, charcoal and hydrochloric acid. Heroin is derived by further processing the morphine with other chemicals. World's top opium poppy producing areas: "Golden Triangle": Burma, Laos, Thailand "Golden Crescent": Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran South America, Mexico Typical opium poppy farm: 25,000-50,000 plants, (about two bulbs per plant) Source: DEA literature - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin