Pubdate: Fri, 4 Jul 2008 Source: Cheboygan Daily Tribune, The (MI) Copyright: 2008 The Cheboygan Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.cheboygannews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3476 Author: Mike Fornes, Tribune Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) STATE COPS ASK HELP IN SPOTTING POT LANSING - While enjoying the outdoors this summer, Michigan State Police troopers are asking residents and travelers to be on the lookout for indicators of illegal marijuana planting. "With its fertile land and remote areas, Michigan is a popular state for marijuana planting," said Col. Peter C. Munoz, director of the Michigan State Police. "To avoid apprehension and forfeiture of their property, growers often plant marijuana on public land or on the property of others, making it common to find marijuana plants in farm fields, backyards, natural forest openings and the shores of lakes, rivers, streams and swamps." Indicators of outdoor grow operations include unusual amounts of traffic; use of camping equipment or recreational vehicles on wooded property with no evidence of recreational activities; persons with little or no farming experience who purchase fertilizer, plastic PVC piping, chicken wire, camouflage netting and clothing; large amounts of PVC piping or irrigation hoses located in heavily wooded areas; and patrolled or guarded woods, swamps and other remote areas. To report a suspected marijuana grow site, call 1-800-235-4367. Callers can remain anonymous. Individuals should not attempt to take action themselves, but instead report the site to law enforcement as soon as possible. Last year, the Michigan Domestic Cannabis Eradication and Suppression Program found 23,198 plants growing outdoors and 12,388 plants were found growing indoors, an increase from the 26,716 plants located in 2006. "Michigan licenses more than 750,000 hunters each year, and there are countless outdoor enthusiasts who enjoy the natural resources found in the nearly seven million acres that make up our state and national forests. These individuals are more likely to run into a remote grow operation than the public at large," said Capt. Thomas Courchaine, acting assistant chief for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources Law Enforcement Division. "The DNR encourages anyone who discovers a grow operation or evidence of a grow operation to call the HEMP hotline or the DNR's Report All Poaching hotline at 1-800-292-7800." Posters and other materials encouraging outdoor enthusiasts to be on the lookout for marijuana are being posted by the DNR this summer at state forest campgrounds, state parks and recreation areas and at the trailhead of trails and pathways across Northern Michigan. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake