Pubdate: Tue, 25 Oct 2005 Source: Wilson Daily Times, The (NC) Copyright: 2005 Wilson Daily Times Contact: http://www.wilsondaily.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1452 THE DANGER TO US ALL OF ILLICIT DRUGS Last week's break-up of a marijuana farming operation deep in woods on the outskirts of Stantonsburg was merely interesting to most area residents, but they should have been alarmed by it. It could be a matter of life and death. Stantonsburg police and Wilson County Sheriff's Office personnel closed down the operation after it was discovered by some hunters. The marijuana was being grown and dried in a clearing inside a wooded area reachable only by pathways carved through undergrowth. The secluded area was perfect for the illicit crop. Officers estimate the confiscated marijuana had a street value of a million dollars. Several other fields of the plant already had been harvested. No arrests have been made. The fight against illicit drug use is never ending, as is true of every other type of criminality. However, drug trafficking is more evil than most crimes because abuse of drugs creates so many victims and causes society so much grief. So we applaud the efforts of local law enforcement agencies to interdict the supply of pot, cocaine, heroine and the many derivatives. Rescuing the weaker members of society from themselves and their drug habits is a noble, if frustrating, work. The more immediate issue, however, is the danger such operations hold for non-users of drugs. The hidden marijuana farm was uncovered when, apparently, a hunter tiptoed up one of the manmade pathways. Instead of finding game to shoot, he came upon the farm. He presumably recognized the pot-growing operation for what it was, skedaddled without being observed and subsequently reported it to authorities. But what if he had stepped out into the clearing to be greeted by the growers themselves? What if the growers had been armed? Would a shootout have occurred? If the growers had gotten the drop on the hunter, would they have killed him to protect their multi-million-dollar operation? That seems likely. One of the dangers of today's drug trafficking is that innocent people can find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time with fatal consequences. A picnic in the wrong pasture. A stroll along the wrong street. The innocent opening of the wrong door, or overhearing of the wrong conversation. In these ways, illicit drugs can kill non-users of drugs. For our own safety, we should support law enforcement officials as they work to thin the drug traffic. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake