Pubdate: Mon, 18 Dec 2006
Source: Concord Monitor (NH)
Copyright: 2006 Monitor Publishing Company
Contact:  http://www.concordmonitor.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/767

BIG DRUG BUSTS IN SMALL TOWNS AREN'T GOOD NEWS

Until now, marijuana growing in New Hampshire has largely been a 
garden variety crime. The weather just isn't conducive to the 
high-intensity illegal agriculture that has drawn drug gangs to the 
national forests and parks of warmer states. But last week people 
woke up, and what they smelled wasn't roses.

Law enforcement agencies seized 11 expensive homes in Andover, 
Pembroke, Concord, Canterbury, Hopkinton, Weare and other communities 
and confiscated 7,000 high-quality marijuana plants. The police 
called it the biggest drug bust in state history.

The homes appear to be what are called grow-ops. Their basements are 
lit by lamps like those used to illuminate the interstate and powered 
with electricity stolen from utilities. If the New Hampshire 
operations were being run like those discovered elsewhere, organized 
crime finances the enterprise and farmers are paid a share of the profits.

Most of the people arrested so far are apparently recent 
Massachusetts residents of Vietnamese ancestry. According to the Drug 
Enforcement Administration, grow-ops are often run by groups of 
Vietnamese or Hispanic people or by motorcycle gangs, but freelancers 
operate them, as well.

The confiscated plants, whose leaves and buds would sell for $3,000 
to $4,000 per pound, would be worth millions at maturity, authorities 
said. Money like that means there's a likelihood that more grow-ops 
exist and that more will follow. The discovery of big marijuana farms 
in small-town New Hampshire raises a host of issues.

Does law enforcement have the resources to combat the problem and 
keep it from growing worse? The answer is: Probably not. Staff 
shortages are a fact of life in most departments. They've been caused 
not so much by the public's unwillingness to spend on its own 
protection as by the enormous diversion of federal resources away 
from local law enforcement in favor of homeland security.

Time magazine recently reported that federal grants to local law 
enforcement have dropped 45 percent since the 9/11 attacks. The 
magazine also found that, driven by drugs and made worse by a lack of 
law enforcement, crime has risen rapidly in midsize American cities. 
Milwaukee is now one of the murder capitals of the nation.

It's time for the federal government to turn some of its attention to 
hometown security, as Milwaukee's mayor said.

New Hampshire is safer than almost anywhere else, but that doesn't 
mean it will stay that way without help. Law enforcement has shut 
down more clandestine methamphetamine labs in the state in the past 
two years than it had in the previous five. Demand for drugs remains 
high, and drug-fueled crimes are increasing.

Mortgages are forfeited when property is seized, so lenders lose and 
taxpayers win. Lenders lose, that is, unless they're in cahoots with 
the growers and write the bad debt off as a cost of engaging in a 
lucrative business.

At a minimum, illegal enterprises on the scale just uncovered in New 
Hampshire mean that landlords and the real estate and banking 
industries, as well as neighbors, the police and utilities, need to 
be more alert to suspicious activity.

As long as an enormous amount of money can be made by manufacturing 
illegal substances, greedy or desperate people will make them. Last 
week's arrests put a dent in the supply and let organized crime know 
that New Hampshire's on the lookout. But the drug busts were more 
frightening than consoling because they suggest that not only can 
organized crime operate here, but that it does.