Pubdate: Mon, 20 Oct 2008 Source: Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus,GA) Copyright: 2008 Ledger-Enquirer Contact: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/enquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237 Author: Chuck Williams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) POLICING MARIJUANA IS A CONSTANT, WIDESPREAD FIGHT Asked to rate marijuana on a scale compared to other drugs, Jack Killorin turned the question around. As director of the White House Office of High Intensity Drug Areas in Atlanta, Killorin has the perspective to ask a better question. "Which scale are you talking about?" Killorin asked. "On the scale of criminal productivity, marijuana is king." A true cash crop. Caught in the middle are the federal, state and local law enforcement officers and agencies fighting the Mexican drug cartels, an increasing number of grow houses and small-time dealers trying to cash in. "Given the widespread use of marijuana in our society, the drug -- day in and day out -- generates huge amounts of money," Killorin said. Sgt. Rick Stinson, a Columbus Police officer who is special agent in charge of the Metro Narcotics Task Force, said there is a reason large drug organizations deal in marijuana. "You don't run some of the risks you run with cocaine," Stinson said. "They would rather get caught with 500 pounds of marijuana than 5 kilos of cocaine." The reason? The punishments are less. A person caught with the 500 pounds of marijuana faces up to a mandatory minimum sentence of 5 years in prison and a $100,000 fine. The person caught with 400 grams of cocaine faces a minimum of 25 years in prison and $1 million fine. Cash crop Columbus is less than 100 miles from Atlanta, one of the nation's major drug distribution hubs. The drug is being moved by organized Mexican cartels to Atlanta for distribution up and down the East Coast, according to local law enforcement agencies. "Atlanta has moved up to a source city for the eastern side of the country," Stinson said. "One of the changes we have seen is more drugs are leaving Atlanta and going into Florida than vice versa." And you can bet some of those drugs are moving in and out of Columbus, Killorin said. "If there is snow on the ground in Columbus -- and there is -- you can bet there is a blizzard in Atlanta," Killorin said. The same thing that made Atlanta the business hub of the South has made it attractive to drug cartels. "You have to remember Atlanta, and to a certain extent Columbus, we are a transportation hub," said Lt. Bill Trivelpiece, in charge of the Atlanta Police Department narcotics unit. "There are numerous interstates that converge in Atlanta. Our business life in Atlanta thrives on our transportation network. Unfortunately, the drug transportation thrives on those same lifelines." And almost always when drug agents make a large bust, they find marijuana. On May 4, 2005, local Metro Narcotics Task Force agents seized more than $37 million worth of drugs and more than $600,000 in cash as part of a roughly two-year investigation dubbed "Operation Beallwood Boys." The investigation targeted the Torrance Hill drug trafficking organization. Four people from Columbus and one person from East Point, Ga., were charged as a result of the raids, which took place over an approximately 42-hour period and included 12 locations. More than 2,500 pounds of marijuana was found in the area warehouse. "One of the trends is major dealers are looking to marijuana as a cash crop," Stinson said. 'Grow houses' And the crop has changed over the years. Instead of marijuana plants growing in fields and forests, a lot of the drug is grown in what are called "grow houses." Using sophisticated hydroponic growing methods, the marijuana plants are grown with soil in rooms that are artificially lit. Earlier this summer local Metro agents assisted the Georgia Bureau of Investigation with a marijuana bust in Terrell County. "This is not a guy putting one plant in his closet with a sun lamp," Stinson said. "It was the most sophisticated indoor grow I have ever seen. There were 100 plants growing together so that it looked like one big bush." A number of large grow houses have been raided in the Metro Atlanta area. But that does not mean the old way of growing marijuana is dead. Lt. Mike Honsinger, with the Athens-Clarke County drug and vice unit, said law enforcement officers are seeing more outdoor-grown marijuana in Georgia. That is reversing a 10-year trend, Honsinger said. "You are seeing it along the I-20 corridor east of Atlanta," Honsinger said. "There were 7,000 plants found in Warren County, 4,000 plants in Oglethorpe County, 3,000 plants in Greene County. And that happened in a two-week period this summer. These were commercial outdoor marijuana grows. The outdoor grows have been on the decline in the last 10 years." In Columbus, a number of agencies from the federal to the local level are working marijuana and other drug cases. In addition to Metro are the Muscogee County Sheriff's Office Narcotics Unit, the Columbus Police Vice and Special Operations, Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Drug Enforcement Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Alcohol Tobacco & Firearms and the Fort Benning Suppression team. "It ranges from street-level operations to affect the users to the highest levels," Stinson said. "When you work dope, you have to attack every level. If you don't, you lose a handle on it." And the risks to law enforcement agents are great, said Trivelpiece. "Recently, I was on the scene of a homicide where the only drug discovered was marijuana," Trivelpiece said. "It is still an illegal drug and dealing it is risky business." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake