Pubdate: Sun, 05 Sep 2004 Source: Press-Enterprise (CA) Copyright: 2004 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Rocky Salmon, The Press-Enterprise Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) CRITICS DECRY POT RAIDS Marijuana: Despite Discoveries Of Inland Groves, The Eradication Program Is Questioned Deputies scouring the hills of western Riverside County have a nose for marijuana. They can spot the musty, pungent odor from far away. And over the past year, they have sniffed out more than 150,000 marijuana plants in the county. "We use helicopters, tips and visit old sites to find these groves, but the most important tool is the smell of marijuana," Lt. Charlie Branscum said as he prepared to enter a grove near Anza. "It's a distinctive smell." The Riverside County marijuana-eradication task force began trampling through the hills, groves and forests around Corona, Idyllwild, Temecula and Anza in April. They will continue into October and are hoping to destroy more than 200,000 plants total. Officials said those plants would sell for more than $4.5 million on the street. The team is part of a larger California program aimed at erasing pot farms. The marijuana sweeps have been criticized in Northern California by residents and marijuana advocates, with the team's tactics and the program's effectiveness questioned. But agents and deputies said they are making their presence known. "We are not just getting drugs off the streets, but keeping them out of schools and out of the community," said Sgt. Mike Blackwood, who supervises a special investigations unit for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, which is heading up the marijuana task force. "We take this very seriously." A Statewide Fight All across California, drug-enforcement agents, border-patrol agents and sheriff's deputies are scouring national forests and finding large groves of marijuana. It's all part of the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting program, started in 1993 in Northern California. In the past year, CAMP members have destroyed more than 460,000 marijuana plants. In its 11-year history, the CAMP program has destroyed 3.5 million plants with an estimated street value of $14 billion. CAMP officials estimate that California marijuana growers rake in at least $5 billion a year. In the past few weeks, CAMP members have aided in getting to hard-to-reach places in Riverside County. The members are trained to hang from a hovering helicopter to yank plants up, officials said. The marijuana-eradication program in Riverside County uses federal and Drug Enforcement Administration monies to fund its work. The program costs $314,000 to pay for overtime and personnel. Most of the deputies and agents going into the hills are working overtime in connection with their regular enforcement duties, Branscum said. Agents said Riverside County ranks among the top 10 counties nationwide in marijuana production. "The county has a lot of public land and national forests," Branscum said. "As long as they have a water source, they can grow the crops anywhere." Criticisms Professors with doctorates, farmers and a former congressman say the program is not as positive as officials say. The critics said the campaigns affect nature, reinforce violence and crime, are a waste of money and even hurt those who need the marijuana for medicinal purposes. They point to a 56,000-acre brush fire in San Diego County started by a helicopter on a marijuana sweep as one reason for concern. "For now we are stuck with this bankrupt policy," said Dale Gieringer, a member of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. "It's hard to assess the impact the program is having, but I know that if they let people grow marijuana in their own homes, you wouldn't have people out in the forests." Others wonder if the campaign is worth the resources. "It's part of the yearly business for these growers to figure they will lose a part to CAMP," said former U.S. Rep. Dan Hamburg, who lives in Ukiah. "Look at the tens of thousands of plants they have found. Those are impressive statistics. What they don't tell you is how much marijuana they don't find, or large-scale growers they don't prosecute." A Day in the Hills As the sun rises above the San Bernardino National Forest near Anza, a group of agents and deputies slither up streambeds, through thickets of sage and manzanita trees. Their goal: a marijuana grove they have been watching for two months. The group clears the area after giving chase to a man watching over the groves. The man seems to disappear in a mountain that he knows better than anyone else. "They move up here, spending up to six months, and watch over these plants," Blackwood said as he picked through marijuana plants. Deputies caught the man running to a car parked along a Forest Service road. They also caught an accomplice. They are arrested and taken into questioning. Deputies will turn the men over to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration or the U.S. Forest Service if they are connected to the groves. The deputies and agents find an air gun but don't come across any booby traps. Deputies said they haven't dealt with traps or anyone firing at them, unlike authorities in Northern California and San Bernardino County. The deputies call in a second squad, which spends the rest of the day hacking and ripping up the plants. The marijuana plants are fed by a small, black line taking water from an underground stream. Manzanita trees cover the plants, but they were easy to spot from a helicopter because of their deep green color, Blackwood said. Several thousand plants circle a small camp. A hole has been dug and is full of cans of chili and tuna and SPAM. Some of the food is already rotting, mixing with the musty scent of the nearby marijuana. A bag of new socks are near the hole, unopened and close to a bottle of rat poison. "The growers are getting more sophisticated," Branscum said. "We even found some using an old car battery to power a radio." The growers deal with the heat and tough conditions because they are paid several thousand dollars or given a percentage of what is grown, Blackwood said. After the deputies and agents pull the plants, they place them in a large net, and a helicopter lifts them out of the forest and back to base camp, where they are put in a large trailer and trucked off to be destroyed. The deputies eventually return to base camp and head home. In several hours, a few of them will be back out in the mountains working on another bust. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek