Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jul 2006 Source: Ft. Pierce Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2006 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.fptribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2974 Author: Will Greenlee Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations PSL HITS DUBIOUS MILESTONE: 50TH ALLEGED GROW HOUSE RAID PORT ST. LUCIE - Police on Wednesday busted their 50th alleged marijuana grow house in less than two months, finding monster plants in a garage that were tall enough to touch the ceiling. That home, in the 2500 block of Southwest Altosta Street, was the second raided Wednesday. Investigators described the first, in the 600 block of Southwest Pueblo Terrace, as a "broken down," or dismantled, grow operation. By Thursday, police were on to No. 51, another dismantled marijuana farm in the 2100 block of Southwest Bayshore Boulevard. "Is it a big deal or a big city?" Police Chief John Skinner said. "You've got to remember something and keep things in perspective. This is a city of 115 square miles ... with about 150,000 people." He said last year 14,000 people moved to Port St. Lucie and perhaps 500 of those "probably break the law on occasion." Using paperwork, computer searches and residents' tips, police began hitting the homes in early May, arresting dozens of people and confiscating thousands of marijuana plants with a street value in the tens of millions of dollars. "This isn't a Port St. Lucie problem," Skinner said. "I would say that throughout South Florida there are grow operations, and we are doing something about it." Sgt. Todd Schrader said when the busts began, he told detectives he suspected they might end up with two or three pot farms, but certainly not the current tally. The majority, he suspects, are linked "in one way or another." Skinner said he thinks the number of pot farms has peaked, and Schrader said that earlier in the investigation it was much easier to find them. "I think there's still some around but a lot have moved on," Schrader said. Meanwhile, Judy and Willie Ford, neighbors of the 50th alleged grow house, said the raid wasn't a shock. "He's a retired policeman, and he said, 'Judy, I think there's something going on over there,'" Judy Ford said of her husband, a retired deputy sheriff from Michigan. Willie Ford said the occupants put up a wooden fence, while his wife said the landscaping grew unattended. "It didn't surprise me," Willie Ford said. Skinner said many have asked why the pot houses sprung up in Port St. Lucie. "It's a legitimate question," he said. "I don't think I have a legitimate answer except to say that this is a growing place, it's an affordable place. "People have decided that possibly this was a great place to set up shop, and I think they're finding out that it's not," he said. Skinner said investigators in the department's special investigations unit have become exceptionally skilled in spotting grow houses and that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement in Tallahassee asked them to teach about pot farm identification. Those arrested in the recent busts include Luis Montero, 52; Liseth Pupo, 32; and Humberto Quinones, 42. "The investigation has arms of its own and certainly the evidence that we've seized thus far requires a lot of analysis," Skinner said. "This is far from an investigation that's over." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin