Pubdate: Sun, 15 Aug 2010 Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA) Copyright: 2010 The Ukiah Daily Journal Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/feedback Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581 Author: Tiffany Revelle UKIAH MAN PROPOSES CITIZEN PATROL OF FOREST TO RID IT OF MARIJUANA A Ukiah man's hopes of rallying volunteers to tear down marijuana gardens in the Mendocino National Forest have law enforcement dubious - - but not against the idea. Ken Good wants to recruit 50 to 100 volunteers - outdoorsmen, ranchers, hunters and others - to patrol the forests and remove the water piping, structures and gardens that pollute the forest and leave residents in fear for their lives. "There seems to be a feeling of almost resignation here that, hey, in the summertime don't go into the national forest because you might get shot,'" Good said. "That's unacceptable. It's public land and it belongs to everyone. It's time to tell them (drug cartels), no mas.'" Bob Nishiyama, a state Department of Justice officer assigned as commander of the Mendocino Major Crimes Task Force for the past eight years, said he has mixed feelings about the idea. The Task Force eradicates marijuana gardens in the forest and on private land, coordinating with other law enforcement agencies. "With the people law enforcement takes on, and the people who are shooting at law enforcement officers, I would hate to think what they would do to civilians," Nishiyama said. He continued, "I have that fear, but by the same token, law enforcement by itself is not going to be able to deal with this issue." Nishiyama said he knows of people who announced their intention to tear down gardens in the forest and then disappeared. "It's easy to get rid of a body in the forest," he said. Good said the volunteer groups would include at least five people at a time who would ride four-wheelers on trails and rugged train in the forest and stay together. "It wouldn't be hard-core," Good said. "But there's safety in numbers, and the more the better." He continued, "Yes, this will be dangerous for us to do this, but it would be more dangerous for teenagers who wander into it." Good said the volunteer effort would be primarily focused on sending a message to illegal immigrants working for drug cartels that the marijuana gardens they tend will be torn down. Although he notes the volunteers would have a right to be armed on public land and could make citizens' arrests, he emphasized, "confrontation in those situations is always a last resort." He continued, "I know the response by law enforcement is going to be, this is dangerous, let us do it,' but they're broke. I'm not doing this because of their inability to handle the problem, but because they don't have the resources." Good said it's been more than 20 years since he worked as a police officer in Visalia and Porterville, and he is currently a contractor who has been in Ukiah for about a year. He said he wants to draw people to the group of volunteers who know the lay of the land. Good said volunteers could do a variety of things, including helping with communication, maintaining vehicles and equipment, watching ingress and egress points to the forest for vehicles with suspicious license plates and gear, which Nishiyama noted might include carloads of soil, fertilizer and gardening gear, rather than camping gear. "We would let the Sheriff's Office know what we were doing," Good said. Nishiyama said the best thing for any group volunteering to take on the problem of drug cartels in the forest is to "come to us and ask where we need help." He added, "We could always use eyes and ears." Good said anyone interested in volunteering can contact him via e-mail at --- MAP posted-by: Matt