Pubdate: Sat, 12 Jul 2008 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2008 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Ryan Sabalow Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California) SHASTA LITE TARGETS POT; NONE SEEN BY FIRE UNIT Move over Operation Alesia. Here comes Operation Shasta Lite. Firefighters may be gathering the most attention as blazes burn across the north state, but uniformed officers have quietly been tromping through public lands in fire-free parts of Shasta County. Sheriff Tom Bosenko said at a news conference Friday that his deputies have for the past week embarked on a major marijuana-eradication campaign in the Lakehead area, pulling up and destroying some 37,705 plants. Bosenko said this summer's pot eradication efforts were scaled down after the success of last year's Operation Alesia campaign, a multiple-agency effort that removed 283,397 pot plants in a few weeks' time and garnered a visit from the nation's drug czar. Thus the reason for the "Lite" in the title, he said. But Bosenko said there's nothing small about this summer's operation designed to target the growers, which he said are largely illegal immigrants farming the pot for Mexican drug cartels. Since May, some 86,000 pot plants have been destroyed in various areas around the county, Bosenko said. Consistent with years past, the growers tear out large swaths of forest, create intricate irrigation systems and use dangerous poisons and pesticides in their work, he said. "All of these grows present an obvious and real threat to public safety and to people using public lands," Bosenko said. No arrests have been reported thus far. Bosenko said pot-busting deputies in camouflage have been largely staying away from firefighting efforts, and a good portion of the U.S. National Guard helicopters used in past pot operations are now soaking blazes from above. Only one grow found in the county thus far has been near fires, but it wasn't discovered as a result of the blazes, Bosenko said. On July 3, a garden of 4,460 marijuana plants was destroyed near the end of Zogg Mine Road. Homes have been threatened in that area by the Moon Complex of fires. Otherwise, fire crews in Shasta County haven't reported much contact with illegal grow operations, Bosenko said. The same goes for firefighters battling blazes in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, said spokesman Mike Odle. But he said it's always a concern. That's why safety briefings regarding illegal marijuana activities around the forest are provided to firefighters, he said. "It is especially important to firefighters not familiar with the issues facing California's public lands or are from out of the area," Odle said in an e-mail. Firefighters are taught not to enter an illegal grow and to turn around when they spot a garden on Forest Service land. If the garden is on private property, it could be legal so firefighters don't bother with it, Odle said. "We avoid the plants and continue to do our job, protecting life and property and mitigating damage to natural resources," Odle said. Trinity County sheriff's Cpl. Omar Brown said that firefighters in his county haven't reported any grows to law enforcement either. However, when the blazes started in the south part of the county, residents called sheriff's deputies saying they saw large numbers of people -- presumably Mexican nationals -- fleeing the deep woods as the flames roared closer, Brown said. Although firefighters haven't reported any run-ins with illegal growers, it's only a matter of time before they do, Brown said. "We're waiting for it to happen," he said. "It's going to happen." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake