Pubdate: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA) Copyright: 2005 The Ukiah Daily Journal Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581 Author: Laura Clark, The Daily Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) MARIJUANA SEIZURES WAY UP IN 05, LOCALLY AND STATEWIDE State and local marijuana eradication teams seized record amounts of pot this season. The Campaign Against Marijuana Planting program confiscated 1,134,692 plants throughout California during the 2005 eradication season -- which generally runs from mid-July to the first week in October. "The 2005 total surpasses the previous record, set last year, by 513,377 plants. The marijuana eradicated in 2005 had an estimated street value of more than $4.5 billion," states information from Attorney General Bill Lockyer's Office. Some 76,490 of those plants were taken from sites located in Mendocino County; 133,441 were seized from various locations in Lake County; and 214,319 plants were seized from Shasta County, according to statistics from Lockyer. Only 150 marijuana plants were pulled from San Mateo County, which was on the bottom of Lockyer's list of the 31 counties involved in the eradication efforts. While in Mendocino County, the multi-agency CAMP program assists the County of Mendocino Marijuana Eradication Team. "At the beginning of the season we will start flying and spotting and identifying gardens, then all that information goes into a data bank that we keep," COMMET Commander Rusty Noe said. "We take these gardens as they come and either investigate or cut them down. Then, the ones that we identify that we can't get to, or need helicopter support for, we save in a data bank for when the CAMP season starts," he said. COMMET, from January 2005 to date, has seized a total of 144,159 marijuana plants from throughout the county, Noe said, noting that some of those plants came from indoor gardens and the rest from outdoor plots. In 2004, COMMET seized about 94,000 plants from 320 sites, he said. This year in Mendocino County, some 397 sites were eradicated, Noe said. Not only were there more gardens this year, but they were also larger. "We are also up quite a bit on the arrests," he said, noting that in 2004, officers made about 25 arrests, and this year so far there have been 49 related arrests in the county. This season, CAMP conducted 237 raids in 31 counties during the traditional growing season. In addition to the plant eradication, officers made 42 arrests and seized 76 weapons. Asked why marijuana activity is up this year, Noe said: "I don't know. . It's up because of the relaxed atmosphere in Mendocino County, but there are a million variables. We had quite a bit of activity in the national forest and outlying timberlands with the Mexican nationals, which brought our numbers up, so that is partially what the increase is about. The other part is we had a lot larger cases this year, meaning more plants per site," he said, referring to some Mendocino County gardens containing as many as 10,000 plants each. Yet that's just a drop in the bucket compared to some of the gardens in Shasta County, where CAMP agents confiscated 214,319 marijuana plants. "The situation with Shasta County is they are just being hammered by Mexican nationals growing marijuana in the field," Noe said. "They will go in ... they are not interested in quality; they are interested in quantity. So they will go into a very remote area and grow thousands of plants, with an average garden (containing) 30,000 plants. Whereas if you look at Mendocino County, our largest garden was probably 12,000 plants. We don't have that corridor," he said. Medical marijuana laws are also responsible for creating an increase in plant growth, Noe said. "The Legislature has to take a good look at medical marijuana and figure out how they are going to set limits, because there are none," Noe said. "They need to start prosecuting these people who are cultivating for profit." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake