Pubdate: Thu, 19 Mar 2009
Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA)
Copyright: 2009 The Ukiah Daily Journal
Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/feedback
Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581
Author: Sean Garmire
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

GROWING VIOLENCE: MARIJUANA GARDENS ARE ROBBERY TARGETS THROUGHOUT 
HUMBOLDT COUNTY

A quiet McKinleyville neighborhood was jolted last Sunday night by 
the echo of three gunshots and the sound of breaking glass, as three 
suspects in an alleged home invasion robbery frantically drove away 
from a marijuana grow house.

Home-invasion robberies at houses with pot gardens occur with 
disconcerting regularity in Humboldt County, law enforcement 
officials say. And the potential for violence in any robbery is high. 
Within the past six months, at least three people have been shot 
during suspected grow house robberies in Humboldt County.

"I can't think of a home invasion robbery in the last two years in 
Humboldt County that hasn't had a drug connection to it," said Eureka 
Police Chief Garr Nielsen. In every case, "it's almost exclusively marijuana."

The Sunday incident

Investigators have been slow to release information about the alleged 
home invasion robbery that occurred in McKinleyville on April 12.

However, three search warrant affidavits filed at the Humboldt County 
Superior Court provide some details surrounding the incident.

According to the affidavits, at around 12:30 p.m. at a Harden Drive 
residence in McKinleyville, three residents -- Richard, Brandon and 
James Barnett -- sat watching TV when they heard a knock at the door.

Brandon Barnett answered, and three black male adults pushed their 
way into the room, demanding, "Where's the stuff?"

One of the men stood guard near the Barnetts Advertisement Quantcast 
while the other two walked into the back of the house and returned 
with two bags, each filled with at least one pound of marijuana.

After grabbing the drugs, the three alleged robbers left the house together.

According to an affidavit, seconds after the suspected robbers walked 
out, Richard Barnett ran for the door, grabbing a .357-caliber pistol 
off the kitchen table as he went.

When Richard Barnett stepped outside, the affidavit says, he saw two 
men seated in a car, while a third stood in the driveway struggling 
to open the car door.

Richard Barnett told police he yelled at the men to stop, warning 
them he had a gun, but the man slipped into the car and the driver hit the gas.

Humboldt County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Brenda Godsey said 
Richard Barnett then fired his gun into the windshield as the driver 
frantically backed out of the driveway, knocking over a portable 
basketball hoop as they sped away.

Police soon received reports of gunshots fired, and traveled to the 
Harden Street residence, where they found the Barnetts and interviewed them.

After conducting the search warrant at the Barnetts' residence, 
police found 23 firearms -- including handguns, rifles and shotguns 
-- in plain view and hidden in rooms throughout the house.

Within a short time that night, a blue Daewoo with three bullet holes 
in its hood and windshield, and blood spattered across the front 
passenger seat, was discovered abandoned in the parking lot of Mad 
River Community Hospital by officers in Arcata.

Although the Sheriff's Office has not released the names of any 
suspects involved in the incident, the affidavit reports 
investigators learned 24-year-old Mario DeAngelo Alexander had been 
admitted to the hospital for two gunshot wounds in his upper chest 
and left hand.

Investigating officer Sgt. Wayne Hanson attempted to speak with 
Alexander, but he could only say he did not know why he was shot, and 
Hanson ceased his questions, allowing Alexander to be treated, 
according to the affidavit.

Hanson said on Friday that Alexander was not in police custody, and 
remained in treatment as the investigation into the alleged home 
invasion robbery continues.

Casing the grows

Richard Barnett told an investigating officer that the day before the 
alleged robbery, a black male who he did not recognize visited his 
residence, announcing he was from the Oakland Cannabis Club and 
asking to see his marijuana garden.

According to information in the search warrant affidavit, the two men 
discussed a price for the pot, but the unknown male suddenly said he 
didn't want it, and left the house.

A company called Oakland Cannabis Club does exist; however, a 
spokesman for the club said it is not a dispensary, but an online 
medical marijuana directory, and its staff is not involved with trade 
in medical marijuana.

According to law enforcement officials, potential grow house robbers 
typically spend some amount of time gathering intelligence on their 
target before breaking in.

Arcata Police Sgt. Todd Dokweiler, who has investigated numerous 
grow-house robberies in Humboldt County, said there are a number of 
ways someone in search of a potential target can find information 
about grow-house locations. And the robberies, he said, are "usually 
not random."

In one alleged grow house robbery in Arcata that occurred in early 
April, Dokweiler said one of five teenage robbery suspects has been 
accused of going door-to-door asking a "bogus question" in search of 
a grow house.

"This was a unique case in that it appears they were randomly casing 
houses looking for grows," Dokweiler said.

Dokweiler said another common way grow houses are identified by 
potential robbers occurs when the grower willingly invites people 
into their house during a party or some other social event.

Usually, grow houses are robbed by people from outside Humboldt 
County, Dokweiler said.

Information about Humboldt County grow houses can be a valuable 
commodity for criminals tempted by quick and easy cash, and the 
location of grow houses is often spread inside jails and prisons, 
said Eureka Police Lt. Murl Harpham.

Humboldt County Sheriff Gary Philp said although grow-house robberies 
are rarely sophisticated operations, they usually do employ some 
amount of intelligence gathering.

"Some (suspects) are from the area," Philp said, "but others have 
been people from out of the area who gathered information from people 
they knew up here."

Crimes of a victim

Many Humboldt County officials in law enforcement say they realize 
only a small fraction of grow-house robberies are ever reported.

"We know there are many that go unreported," Mendosa said. "The 
people who are victims of the violent acts are themselves committing crimes."

Dokweiler is one of many police officers who say the vast majority of 
grow-house robberies are never reported. The robberies that are 
reported, Dokweiler said, are done so usually only after a person is 
seriously injured or gunshots are fired, which draws attention to the scene.

Officials in law enforcement say every grow-house robbery is 
different, but in many cases, the grower may not face any charges.

Nielsen said, "Growing is certainly not a violent crime like a 
robbery is. From my perspective, that's what takes priority -- but 
that's not to say we would disregard the fact someone has an illegal grow."

Mendosa too said he would not be willing to automatically offer 
immunity for growers who have been robbed.

"I can think of lots of situations when we may decide that it's a 
prosecutable case for the grower," Mendosa said. But, he continued, 
in most instances, "the marijuana grow portion of the case was a 
minimum issue."

Growing protection

In Humboldt County, grow houses are plentiful and the growers are 
composed of a diverse spectrum of lifestyles. But in every one of 
their gardens are plants that have proven to be an exceptionally 
attractive asset for thieves.

Nielsen, Philp and Mendosa all agree, the best way for a grower to 
limit their likelihood of being robbed is to just grow less.

"We are not looking at preventing people from having (gardens), just 
reducing the amount being grown," Philp said. "Three pounds is very 
attractive -- a couple ounces, people are probably not going to take 
the effort."

Growing less, however, is difficult for some.

Nielsen said growing small amounts may be difficult for any 
Proposition 215 collective growing operation. Harpham added that many 
growers who adhere to the state-mandated six mature plant limit 
cannot harvest enough to meet their medical needs.

For Philp, the biggest concern is that those who must grow marijuana 
can do it safely.

"If you're growing, and you've got a fairly significant amount, 
you're at risk," Philp said. "All it takes is somebody telling the 
right person who passes it on. The next thing you know, you've got 
somebody in your house."

Sean Garmire can be reached at 441-0514 or A run-down on grow-house robberies:

Many law enforcement officials accept that a large percentage of 
home-invasion robberies in residences with marijuana grows go 
unreported by victims who fear prosecution. However, many marijuana 
grow-house robberies are known to police.

The following is an incomplete list of several recent suspected 
home-invasion robberies in Humboldt County that involved the theft of 
marijuana.

1. In early April 2008, police responded to a Garberville residence 
where occupants reported three men broke into the house with a 
handgun, demanding money and marijuana, while threatening to kill the 
residents.

2. In late April 2008, police arrested two men on suspicion of 
breaking into a Eureka residence on Little Fairfield, where they 
allegedly assaulted the occupants of the home, before fleeing with 
electronics, a shotgun and marijuana.

3. In October 2008 in Garberville, police investigated an armed 
robbery of a residence on Timber Lane. According to reports from the 
Humboldt County Sheriff's Office, the suspects allegedly entered the 
house, pointed a shotgun at the residents, who were holding a young 
baby, and demanded their marijuana. According to HCSO information, 
the suspects had mistakenly identified the residence as a grow house, 
and left shortly after learning there was no marijuana inside.

4. During November 2008, police began an investigation into an 
alleged armed grow-house robbery in McKinleyville. During the alleged 
robbery, one of the suspects was allegedly shot in the back, with a 
shotgun, by the resident of the property. The suspect was wounded, 
but survived the incident.

5. On December 3, 2008, Garrett Ryan Benson was shot and killed 
inside his home in Cutten. Police arrested two suspects, who have 
since been charged for their alleged roles in his murder. According 
to HCSO information, Benson had a large amount of marijuana growing 
and processed in the residence, which is a likely motive for the murder.

6. In March 2009, Police arrested Waymond Kelly and Michael Johns for 
allegedly robbing a suspected grow house on D Street in Eureka, armed 
with a shotgun. According to Eureka Police Department information, 
after the resident was approached by the suspects, she reportedly 
took out a can of pepper spray, and both of the suspects fled the house.

7. On April 1, 2009, police in Arcata suspect that five teenagers -- 
Scott William Boileau, 19, Samuel Frederick Ruchte, 19, Jason Earl 
Stockley Dodge, 19, Thomas Jones, 19, and Brian Fox, 17 -- allegedly 
attempted to rob a suspected grow house on Bayside Road in Arcata.

8. An alleged robbery of a grow house on April 12, 2009, ended with 
one man, Mario DeAngelo Alexander, 24, shot two times. Two other 
suspects remain at large. Police believe they were attempting to rob 
a suspected marijuana grow house on Harden Drive in McKinleyville.