Pubdate: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 Source: Cincinnati Enquirer (OH) Copyright: 2007 The Cincinnati Enquirer Contact: http://enquirer.com/editor/letters.html Website: http://enquirer.com/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/86 Author: Chris Kenning Louisville Courier-Journal Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) AUTHORITIES BATTLE POT HARVEST IN KENTUCKY BARBOURVILLE, Ky -- Deep in the Appalachian woods, Kentucky State Police Trooper Dewayne Holden's Humvee struggled up what once was an old logging trail. As his three-truck convoy stopped at a clearing atop a 3,000-foot ridge, Holden grabbed a machete and joined eight other armed troopers and National Guardsmen, hiking toward a hill under some power lines. But the pot growers had beaten them to the prize: Gone were the 40 to 50 marijuana plants worth as much as $100,000 that Holden spotted from a helicopter more than a week earlier. Only six spindly plants and some fresh ATV tracks were left. Welcome to the battle that police and marijuana growers wage each fall in Kentucky's remote Appalachian counties, where 75 percent of the state's top cash crop is grown. Kentucky produces more marijuana than any other state except California, making it home to one of the nation's more intensive eradication efforts - a yearly game of harvest-time cat and mouse in national forests, abandoned farms, shady hollows, backyards and mountainsides. More than 100 state police, guardsmen, Drug Enforcement Administration agents, U.S. Forest Service spotters and others are part of a strike force that works dawn to dark, sometimes roping into remote patches from Blackhawk helicopters. With a budget of $1.5 million and help from a $6 million federal anti-drug effort in the region, last year the state seized 557,628 marijuana plants worth an estimated $1.3 billion. Authorities say their eradication effort keeps drugs off the streets and illicit profits out of criminal hands. But critics call it a waste of time and money that has failed to curb availability or demand. C. Frank Rapier, director of the federal Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, said the eradication has been a success. He said since efforts started in the 1990s, the national forests are a little safer for visitors; there's less marijuana, which he believes is a gateway to harder drugs; the Mexican drug gangs that control much of the marijuana growing in California have stayed away. Others have a different view. "Trying to eradicate marijuana is like taking a teaspoon and saying you're going to empty the Atlantic Ocean," said Gary Potter, an Eastern Kentucky University professor of criminal justice who has researched the issue for decades. Allen St. Pierre, director of the Washington-based National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), said efforts in all 50 states haven't prevented marijuana production from increasing 10-fold in the past 25 years to an estimated 22 million pounds in 2006. A typical day for the Appalachian eradication team will involve hitting 15 to 20 marijuana plots - most spotted by Holden or another pilot in a helicopter. They have learned to spy the telltale earthen trails and bluish-green of pot patches. They mark the GPS coordinates, then guide in ground forces to cut and burn the crop. The booby traps they might face include pipe bombs with trip wires, fishing hooks strung face-high across trails, sharpened bamboo sticks, ankle-crushing bear traps; and boards pounded through with three-inch nails that are laid on the ground and covered with leaves. The traps are meant mainly for thieves. Most growers found on the sites, even armed ones, flee when police arrive. But a few years ago, three growers blew themselves up rigging a pipe bomb. The 68 counties in Eastern Kentucky, eastern Tennessee and western West Virginia that make up the Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area have less than 1 percent of the country's population, but were home to roughly 10 percent of the marijuana eradicated nationwide in 2006. Many small Eastern Kentucky towns, steeped in a tradition of bootlegging moonshine, also have high rates of unemployment, poverty and in some cases, public corruption, according to federal drug officials. People can make as much as $2,000 from a single plant, an often-irresistible draw when good-paying jobs are scarce. The estimated worth of seized plants alone far outstrips Kentucky's other crops. Federal statistics for 2005 show state receipts for tobacco were $342 million and corn were $336 million, compared with close to $1 billion of pot eradicated that year. Authorities complain that in some counties, it is difficult to get a jury to indict, much less convict, a marijuana grower. Holden said that unless a patch he cuts down is huge or contains traceable evidence, he rarely goes knocking at nearby homes in hopes of ferreting out the grower. Everyone knows who it is, he said, but no one tells. "It's very ingrained in the culture," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman