Pubdate: Thu, 24 Aug 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: B1 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Dan Nguyen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) TIPS SMOKE OUT INDOOR POT FARMS As Raids Target Elk Grove Homes, Hillside Yolo Operation Yields 9,000 Plants More than 10,000 marijuana plants were seized in three Sacramento-area raids Wednesday, further contributing to what some law enforcement officials say has been a lucrative year for pot suppression. On a dense Capay Valley hillside in rural Yolo County in the early morning, the Yolo Narcotic Enforcement Team unearthed and hauled off more than 9,000 plants that, fully cultivated, could have yielded more than $40 million for the operators, said Roy Giorgi, YoNET commander. The bust brought Yolo County's total of eradicated pot plants for the year to 16,000 -- far surpassing the average year's total of 1,000 to 2,000 plants, Giorgi said. A similar spike is being seen statewide, he said. "It's a huge business," he said. "If one of (these plots) can make it through (the season), you're talking multi-million dollar profit." Also on Wednesday, federal drug agents and local police raided two indoor residential pot farms in Elk Grove, bringing to eight the total of such illicit operations uncovered in the booming suburban city this summer alone. The raid found more than 1,000 plants, said Scott Hoernke, resident agent-in-charge for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. The two homes are believed to be part of an operation that included five homes -- three in Elk Grove, two in Sacramento -- uncovered by police two weeks ago. And Elk Grove isn't the only city seeing a spike in these narcotic operations. Sgt. Terrell Marshall, spokesman for the Sacramento Police Department, estimated that 15 indoor pot farms have been found in the city this year. "This seems to be a pretty big trend going on," he said. The Capay Valley raid began about 8:30 a.m., with officials from YoNET and the state Department of Justice's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting dropping into the site by helicopter. The marijuana plants -- surrounded and hidden by dense vegetation -- were several miles off Highway 16, near the town of Rumsey. The plants towered up to 9 feet, Giorgi said, with 4- to 15-inch buds. "We're talking very good marijuana -- high content THC," he said, referring to the active ingredient in cannabis. Based on a camp found at the plot, Giorgi estimated that four workers had been tending the plants -- very diligently, he added -- which were on a drip irrigation system. Officials made no arrests in the raid. Giorgi said arrests are rare in raids like Wednesday's because workers often wear camouflaged clothing and know trails that lead out of the area. "It's hard to go in there in covert or stealth mode because of the vegetation," he said. The Elk Grove raid began about 9 a.m. The two houses -- one on Misty River Way, the other near Maybeck Way - -- are half-million-dollar houses, a few blocks from parks and schools. According to Sacramento County property records, the houses were bought in November and December by Xu Liang Chen, a Milpitas resident. A woman identifying herself as Yuki Huang, his wife, confirmed the couple own the properties but said she was unaware of the raid. She said she believes the properties are rentals. Chen wasn't home to comment, she said. No arrests were made Wednesday. As his officers finished cleaning out one of the houses, Sgt. Scott French, who supervises the Elk Grove street crimes unit, said he couldn't say if the day's raid was the end of the operation. "It just keeps rolling," he said. "It is possible there could be more. Or it is possible we may be done, finally." The streak of raids this summer began with a serendipitous find on June 8, French said. A home on Paso Fino Way caught fire, and firefighters stumbled across an indoor pot farm. The electrical hijacking used to provide the light had apparently gone awry. French said there doesn't appear to be a direct connection between that incident and the August raids, but the earlier raid generated publicity, which brought in a flurry of tips from residents calling about rarely seen neighbors, living in houses with strange noises, unkempt lawns and darkened windows. "A lot of the fallout from Paso Fino carried us to these homes today," French said. Also in late June, eight men were arrested in an operation that targeted two homes in Elk Grove. Officials say those marijuana operations were unrelated to the ones raided this month. Because of the size of the drug ring, French said local agencies had handed it off to the Drug Enforcement Administration. French and Hoernke did not say what led them to the two most recent houses. Instead of furniture, the Misty River Way home contained a tangle of electrical cords and ventilation hoses snaking around bags of young marijuana plants. Air filtration units crowded a hallway, and blue sheets covered the windows. "I like the fact that they're busting them, but I don't like the fact that they're in my back yard," said Paul Allen, who lives a block away from the house. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake