Pubdate: Sun, 02 Jul 2006 Source: Jacksonville Daily News (NC) Copyright: 2006 Jacksonville Daily News Contact: http://www.jacksonvilledailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/216 Author: Roselee Papandrea Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DRUG PLAN A BUST Some people hide it deep in the woods where it's difficult for passersby and law enforcement to see. But for a National Guard pilot with extensive training spotting vegetation in an area where there just shouldn't be neatly planted rows or water hoses, finding marijuana isn't that complicated. Communicating the location and hovering over the spot until a team of investigators with the Onslow County Sheriff's Department can navigate through thick brush, vines, snakes and possibly chiggers -- now, that's a different story. But it's what the sheriff's department does at least once a year -- sometimes twice -- in an effort to eradicate the county of its drugs, at least the stuff grown outside. A recent attempt didn't yield much in the way of marijuana. While the search was cut short by the storm that dumped more than 4 inches of rain on Jacksonville Wednesday, causing the two National Guard helicopters to be grounded, it's possible that there just wasn't much marijuana to be found. "A lot of people who sell marijuana realize there is more of a market for specialized marijuana, which can be done inside using hydroponics," said Onslow County Sheriff's Capt. Rick Sutherland. "If more people are specializing, it lessens our chances of finding any." The window of time to locate marijuana growing outside is narrow. While seedlings are usually put in the ground in March, usually law enforcement must wait a few months for some growth to take place. But they want to get to the marijuana and destroy it before harvest time, which is usually late July or early August, Sutherland said. "This time of year, the plants will be closest to maturity, which makes them easier to spot," Sutherland said. "We want to get there before harvest begins." It's not unusual for the sheriff's department to receive complaints from residents who spot the signs of marijuana growing in fields or even in pots on their neighbors' back porches or behind sheds. As a result of the tips, the sheriff's department can find some of it on their own. But the stuff planted off the beaten track becomes more of a problem. "Frequently, marijuana is planted in really secluded areas and we can't get there without air support," Sutherland said. Based on the tips received from residents and investigations done by the sheriff's department, the pilots, who can be from the National Guard, the N.C. Highway Patrol or Marine Patrol, are given global positioning system coordinates to help them get close to a suspected area. The rest is up to the keen eyes of the pilots and the investigators willingness to search. "The key to eradications is having good pilots and good spotters," Sutherland said. "It helps to have good information, too." PVC pipes or numerous hoses linked and stretched into the woods are usually telltale signs, and more often than not growers plant on land that doesn't belong to them whether it be a farmer's plot or somewhere in the middle of Hoffman Forest, Sutherland said. "(Drug growers) want something that won't be drawn back to them by tax records," Sutherland said. While some arrests spring out of annual drug eradications, the key to the effort is to destroy the plants before they are harvested and sold on the street. "If we find a grow, we can set up surveillance and see who tends it," Sutherland said. "Or we can just seize it and get it off the market. ... We attempt to pull it out by the roots and take the whole plant and root ball with us. Where that's not feasible, we take a machete and cut it off as low to the ground as possible." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath