Pubdate: Thu, 15 Feb 2007 Source: Nevada Appeal (Carson City, NV) Copyright: 2007 Nevada Appeal Contact: http://www.nevadaappeal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/896 Author: William Ferchland WITH NEARLY $2 MILLION CONFISCATED IN ONE MONTH, IS THE POT SCENE GOING UP IN SMOKE? The first major marijuana bust of the year that netted nearly $1 million worth of planted and processed marijuana was discovered at a Tahoe Keys home. Roughly two weeks later more than $560,000 worth of marijuana was found by authorities in a home along Tahoma Drive. Jeff Catchings, commander of SLEDNET, South Shore's drug enforcement agency, said 117 marijuana plants were discovered Friday at a home near Tata Lane with a value around half a million dollars. In all, the three busts netted marijuana with a street value in the ballpark of $2 million. "I haven't seen this many grows in this period of time," Catchings said. "I would say there is definitely a spike in the number of grows." Jonmichael Debettencourt, 26, of Santa Rosa; Kevin Thomas Parker, 27, of Bakersfield; and Erik Raymond Zortman, 26, of Petaluma were arrested in the first bust in the Tahoe Keys. Debettencourt and Parker are charged with cultivat-ing and possessing marijuana for sale while Zortman was charged with suspicion of possession of a narcotic without a prescription. Dane Gasper, a 37-year-old South Lake Tahoe resident, was arrested on suspicion of cultivating and possessing marijuana for sale in the Tahoma Drive arrest. Catchings couldn't recall the name of the person arrested Friday, except it was a 20-year-old male with $25,000 in cash stashed in a sock. El Dorado County has guidelines for people growing medical marijuana (http://www.co.el-dorado.ca.us/eldoda/cua.html) and Catchings said his officers have walked away from such grows. Usually, Catchings said, the legal growers want to notify law enforcement. In the past three major busts, officers were told the marijuana was being grown for medical purposes, Catchings said. Hans Uthe, assistant district attorney of El Dorado County, didn't know what to make of the recent busts. "I don't know if there's any predictability to it," he said. "It may mean there's more in the community or it may mean we've had a streak of finding the ones that are there." Some, such as Jon Gettman of DrugScience.org, a Web site devoted to cannabis reform, argue the number of grows throughout the United States means marijuana legalization should be considered. "The ten-fold growth of production over the last 25 years and its proliferation to every part of the country demonstrates that marijuana has become a pervasive and ineradicable part of the national economy," Gettman wrote in a report, "Marijuana Production in the United States (2006)." "The failure of intensive eradication programs suggests that it is finally time to give serious consideration to marijuana's legalization in the United States," he continued. Across the lake, the Placer County Sheriff's Department this year has arrested suspected drug dealers and seized 297 grams of marijuana, 87 grams of suspected methamphetamine, 56 grams of suspected cocaine, $12,464 from drug transactions and three vehicles used to transport drugs. The arrests stem from tips deputies received during community interaction, a Placer County deputy said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine