Pubdate: Sun, 6 Sep 2009 Source: Corvallis Gazette-Times (OR) Copyright: 2009 Lee Enterprises Contact: http://www.gazettetimes.com/forms/contact/letters_editor/ Website: http://www.gazettetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2976 Author: Hasso Hering Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?161 (Marijuana - Regulation) HOW TO END THE POT BATTLES Last month the Marion County Sheriff's Office issued a report of a type that has become almost routine in the mid-valley. And it will remain common unless the country makes a change in its laws. The department's street crimes unit had ripped up more than 300 marijuana plants from a field in remote Silver Creek Canyon between Sublimity and Silverton. Deputies found four different pot plantations on privately owned land in very rugged terrain. The plants were from 1 to 7 feet tall. If they had been left standing until harvested, deputies said, they would have had a street value estimated at nearly a million dollars. A few days before, in Linn County, deputies reported finding a smaller marijuana field and arresting the alleged grower. This one was not all that remote. Since then, Linn County raided at least one other pot plantation. And just a few days ago, the Oregon State Police reported stopping two vehicles on I-5 in Southern Oregon with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of marijuana in bags. Evidently, the legalized growing of small amounts of allegedly medical pot has not put a dent in the illegal side of the trade. One unusual thing about the August raid in Marion County was that when the street crimes unit and a SWAT team got there, they startled two young men, one with a rifle over his shoulder, who fled into the woods. The men were caught a while later and jailed, and the sheriff's office said they were from Mexico. (Just the other day Attorney General John Kroger announced getting a federal grant to fight Mexican drug gangs in Oregon.) It doesn't take much of an imagination to fear that turf battles between rival pot farmers might end in gunplay and bloodshed. The Marion County Sheriff's Office had some advice: "If you are in the woods or a remote location and come across what you believe to be a marijuana grow, you should immediately leave the area and contact law enforcement. If possible make a note of the location and GPS coordinates if you have them available." The situation is not likely to get better any time soon. When there's a crop that grows well in the soil of Oregon's forests, and when a mere 300 plants can eventually be worth close to a million dollars, it doesn't take a genius to predict that criminals are going to try to grow and sell it even though it's illegal. Over the years, suggestions have been made that Congress and the legislature should change federal and state law to make marijuana legal and tax it, kind of like alcohol or tobacco. As long as those suggestions are ignored, criminals will continue to see their chance, deputies will continue to uproot fields they find, troopers will continue to stop the occasional couriers, and the woods will remain a dangerous place. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake