Pubdate: Thu, 02 Nov 2006 Source: Lake County Record-Bee (CA) Copyright: 2006 Record-Bee Contact: http://www.record-bee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3384 Author: Cynthia Davis, Record-Bee Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) LAKE COUNTY LEADS WAY WITH CAMP RAIDS LAKE COUNTY - Lake County leads the way out of 34 counties in the record number of marijuana plants seized this harvest season. A grand total 314,603 plants were seized here under the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting program (CAMP), which is the largest law enforcement task force in the United States. Created in 1983, CAMP is a multi-agency law enforcement task force managed by the California Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement and composed of more than 110 local, state and federal agencies organized expressly to eradicate illegal cannabis cultivation and trafficking in California. Monday Attorney General Bill Lockyer announced the State Department of Justice's 2006 CAMP campaign set a new record with the seizure of 1,675,681 total marijuana plants during the eradication season. The nearly 1.7 million plants seized this year are valued in excess of $6.7 billion and surpass last year's record-breaking season by 540,989 plants. A total of 751,287 plants were seized in Lake, Shasta, Mendocino and Sonoma counties combined. Last year the State Department of Justice said that 1.1 million plants were seized in total out of 31 participating counties. Attorney General's Office spokesperson Robin Schwanke said the increase is due to several factors: more counties participating in CAMP's program, more eradication teams, air transport of law enforcement officers to the illegal plots, and eradication efforts which include the use of helicopters to identify marijuana plants. Additionally, Schwanke said, "The average garden size is growing." California has 20 million acres of national forest, much of it thick with trees that provide cover and privacy, but five CAMP teams covering five regions in the state worked for months to protect public lands from illegal large-scale marijuana growers. The CAMP program conducted 477 raids in 34 counties between late July and early October this year. In addition to the plant eradication, authorities said they made 27 arrests and seized 29 weapons. There were no officer-involved shootings and no fatalities this year. In comparison, last year CAMP conducted 237 raids in 31 counties during the growing season and officers made 42 arrests and seized 76 weapons. There was one officer-involved shooting and one suspect fatality in Santa Clara County in 2005. The CAMP program is aimed at large outdoor marijuana farms and 80 percent of the marijuana was found on public land such as parks and national forests, with the remaining 20 percent found on remote private land, according to the State Department of Justice. Headed by the Department of Justice's Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement (BNE), since the CAMP program began, agents have eradicated more than 6.9 million plants with an estimated street value of $27.6 billion. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek