Pubdate: Thu, 22 Sep 2011
Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Copyright: 2011 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsreview.com/chico/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/559
Author: Howard Hardee
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?208 (Environmental Issues)

DIRTY BUSINESS

Cartels Add Danger, Environmental Degradation to Local Landscape

In a pine grove just off highway 70 on the doorstep of the Plumas 
National Forest, evidence of a recently busted Mexican marijuana 
cartel's 6,000-plant operation is abundant.

Though the cartel camp was shut down in late August, there are still 
lines strung among the trees where drying marijuana was hung and a 
complex irrigation system is intact. There are open bags of 
fertilizer, car batteries, bottles of rat poison, empty and full 
5-gallon propane tanks, bags of filthy clothes and every other kind 
of trash imaginable strewn across the forest floor.

"They don't care, they just leave it," said Det. Doug Patterson of 
the Butte County Sheriff's Office Special Enforcement Unit. "It's 
sickening. I mean, these are our forests."

For Patterson, bases of thick stalks protruding out of indents in the 
soil where he and his team sheared thousands of marijuana plants on 
the verge of harvest are signs of a job well done-another cartel 
marijuana operation will fail to bring its product to market.

In a typical year, Butte County will shut down 20 to 25 large-scale 
Mexican cartel grows through the Special Enforcement Unit. Cartels 
are attracted to remote reaches of the county because the rugged 
terrain provides plenty of natural concealment for a garden and a 
major obstacle for law enforcement.

Although the Sheriff's Office is occasionally tipped off by campers 
or hunters who stumble into a pot patch, operations are typically 
discovered by air. The county has one plane and two helicopters at 
its disposal specifically for locating remote gardens.

Once the unit is sure of a garden's location, it will go in on foot. 
Some camps are within walking distance from major roadways, while 
others present more of a challenge.

"There are gardens that are an absolute nightmare," said Patterson, 
who has been a part of the SEU for nine years. "You're about ready to 
die by the time you get into that garden. It's hot. There are steep 
canyon walls, very difficult terrain well away from a road."

It is critical the unit stealthily navigates the forests and 
mountains en route to cartel operations, as prolonged surveillance of 
the growers is the best way to collect evidence and build a case. As 
a result, they travel in heavy camouflage and face paint and make an 
effort to limit the size of their team.

"The fewer people we take in, the less noise we make going in there," 
Patterson said. "Eight is a nice number, where we can keep it nice 
and quiet and still have enough bodies to surround the garden."

Concealed in the undergrowth, the unit will often wait through the 
night for the growers to reveal themselves rather than seek them out. 
The cartels often fashion elaborate tunnels and processing areas out 
of branches and brush to hide their activities from aerial patrols, 
so the safest option is to stay put.

"It makes sense to let them come to us, especially at night," 
Patterson said. "The first priority is locating the people and the 
guns, not the plants. The plants aren't going to kill us."

The cartels post armed guards who have been known to level their 
barrels at hunters and law enforcement alike. However, once the alarm 
is raised, the growers are more inclined to disappear into the forest 
via established escape routes. In the Highway 70 case, only one 
cartel member was taken into custody.

Even after many hours of trudging through the forest and lying in 
wait in the undergrowth, the unit immediately gets to work once 
cartel members are detained or abandon their camp.

"After that, you get to come back and cut down five or six thousand 
plants and bundle them up," Patterson said. "Not fun."

Once a cartel member is taken into custody, cases rarely go to a jury 
trial due to overwhelming evidence. Once convicted, they will serve 
their sentence and get deported to their home country.

In more than 90 percent of cases, Patterson said, their home country is Mexico.

For all the danger posed to the public by an armed encampment in the 
forest, the environmental risk is just as great.

The Highway 70 site is a prime example. The cartel diverted an entire 
stream high on the mountain so gravity's pull brought water to each 
plant through plastic feeder tubes, cleared manzanita shrubs and 
trees to allow for more sunlight, constructed a makeshift stove 
fueled by propane in a tinder-dry brush dwelling, and left various 
toxic chemicals to seep into the groundwater. It was an environmental disaster.

While there is strong public sentiment that legalizing marijuana 
would eliminate the market for marijuana cartels and the associated 
environmental and public-safety issues, Patterson argues that nothing 
is further from the truth.

"You'll get a lot of pro-marijuana people who think if it gets 
legalized, all of this will just go away," he said. "The Mexican 
nationals couldn't want that more. If marijuana was decriminalized, 
what do we have on them? Trespassing. It would actually make it much 
more difficult to do anything about them doing this to the forest."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom