Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 2004 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2004 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Kelly St. John, Chronicle Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) SOLANO ABUZZ OVER BIG POT BUST 8,000 Marijuana Plants Set Aflame by Sheriff's Officials Solano County officials seized 8,000 marijuana plants worth $40 million this week, a bust the sheriff Thursday called the largest of its kind in county history. Sheriff Gary Stanton said officials didn't yet know who was growing the massive crop -- planted in patches over hundreds of acres of rugged terrain in the Blue Ridge Mountains near Vacaville. Whoever it was, he said, tapped local springs to irrigate the plants and slept at a rudimentary campsite nearby. But as Stanton watched one of his deputies douse a one-ton pile of the green plants with diesel fuel and set it ablaze -- sending up clouds of pungent smoke -- Stanton said he knew one thing: "Somebody is definitely out of a substantial investment." Authorities first stumbled across the crop Aug. 27 after responding to a neighbor's complaint of trespassers. Deputies arrested one man on trespassing charges in connection with the bust; his name and any information he provided to investigators are being withheld to protect his safety, Stanton said. In the following days, deputies kept finding marijuana plants spread over a circle a mile wide, growing on terraces cut into steep hillsides so overgrown with brush and poison oak that authorities had to hack their way in with machetes, Stanton said. Ultimately, it took the bird's eye view from a California Highway Patrol helicopter to locate all the plants -- which were budding and nearly ready for harvest. More than a dozen sheriff's deputies spent Thursday cutting down the plants, digging up their roots and flying the debris -- 500 pounds at a time -- to a field east of Vacaville where Deputy Ken Kramer tended a giant bonfire of burning pot. "You can tell by the smell, it's the good stuff," Stanton said. "I could smell it from the helicopter at 80 feet." After saving a sample as evidence, the best option was to burn the rest of it, Stanton said. "Storing this quantity of marijuana is a nightmare," he said. "It rots, it gets moldy, and it emits such a strong odor, it makes people sick." Nearby, Kramer prodded the burning pile with a pitchfork. Kramer, 35, guessed he had burned 4,600 plants over two days, adding, "I've been trying to avoid the downwind." Normally assigned to community policing, Kramer said he was picked for the job because he has a commercial driver's license, which allows him to drive the flatbed truck hauling the plants to the burn site. As a commercial driver, he conceded, that also means he is subject to random drug tests. "Obviously, I probably wouldn't pass," said Kramer, noting that he thinks his employer would give him a slide under the circumstances. Kramer said his family got a big laugh when the local paper printed a photograph of him on Thursday's front page tending a smoke-out that some folks would go out of their way to try to find. His 13-year-old daughter seemed especially amused, he said. "She just laughs. She's in junior high school, and sees the stoner kids at school," Kramer said. "There's a comical side to this, I guess." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake