Pubdate: Sat, 28 Aug 2004 Source: Vacaville Reporter (CA) Copyright: 2004 Vacaville Reporter Contact: http://www.thereporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/472 Author: Jason Massad, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DRUGS WORTH $15 MILLION SEIZED More than 3,000 marijuana plants were seized Friday by Solano County sheriff's officials near the steep and rugged Gates Canyon, a remote area northwest of Vacaville. Seizure of the mature plants, valued at $5,000 each, will remove an estimated $15 million in illicit drugs from the street, officers said. That could be a record for county law enforcement, said spokesman Keith Bloomfield. The bust was led by sheriff's detectives, deputies and Cal-MMET officers, a state drug enforcement group with ties to local agencies. Following a recent tip, about 15 officers started their trek into Gates Canyon early Friday morning. After hours of hiking, they discovered, south of the canyon, several large gardens of marijuana plants folded into the rugged terrain and hidden beneath a canopy of manzanitas and oaks. "You could fly over it and you'd never even see it," said Bloomfield, who participated in the bust. An "elaborate" camp was discovered in the vicinity of the plants. However, no suspects were found, even though it was apparent the camp recently had been occupied. Officers said the heavily wooded terrain made it likely that any suspects heard them coming before they arrived. Also, the ruggedness of the area made it difficult to catch anyone. "There's no way to get a perimeter on it and go in and squeeze them out," said a Cal-MMET undercover officer, who asked not to be named. The multiple marijuana gardens were fed by an irrigation hose that drew water from a nearby spring. Officers followed the irrigation hose, which led them from garden to garden. The marijuana plants, which stood 6 feet tall, were flowering and close to being harvested. "We could smell it long before we found it," Bloomfield said. Officers destroyed the plants in the backcountry because of the remoteness of the area. Several teams were airlifted out by helicopter after the seizure. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin