Pubdate: Sat, 05 May 2012 Source: Visalia Times-Delta, The (CA) Copyright: 2012 The Visalia Times-Delta Contact: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2759 Author: David Castellon CANNABIS CONCERNS HIT HOME FOR NEIGHBORS OF GROW OPERATIONS IN TULARE COUNTY Carmen Lopez didn't know how it happened so quickly. One day in early April, a large plywood fence was built behind a long-vacant home in her Earlimart neighborhood and "unsavory" people started hanging out there. Though she couldn't see what was going on behind the fence, Lopez, a real estate agent, has seen similar fencing in other southern Tulare County communities, and she was told the fencing was up to hide marijuana being grown behind them. This worried Lopez and her husband, Rogelio, so much that on April 17, they went to the Tulare County Board of Supervisors meeting and asked the members if whoever built the fence and possibly started growing marijuana had a permit and, if so, why neighbors hadn't been told what was happening. "We have guardianship of two young granddaughters," said Carmen, 55, noting that she worried about "nuisance people" and thieves. "It would not be a healthy area for anyone, because thieves could come in at night. They might be shooting. We're right next door, and that could be dangerous." It's a concern that Tulare County Sheriff's Lt. Tom Sigley and the narcotics deputies he oversees have heard a lot, especially over the past two years. "Prior to a couple of years ago, we had more mountain [marijuana] groves, and what we've found is they have come down to the Valley floor trying to hide behind the medical-marijuana laws." he said. Some are "mom and pop operations" growing small amounts of the plants, while some are tied to drug cartels and produce large amounts, sometimes on farmland surrounded by other crops, Sigley said. "In most of these, we find weapons, people guarding the groves, just like in the mountains," he said, adding that he has heard some Kern County marijuana gardens had booby traps capable of severely hurting or killing anybody who tripped them. Most reports of marijuana grows in unincorporated Tulare County go first to the Sheriff's Department. Sigley said that last year, his department identified 605 marijuana grow sites, but because of the time involved investigating each one and raiding those where investigators believed criminal activity clearly was occurring, "We got to about 300 of them." During one raid in the Goshen area last year, deputies found marijuana plants 18 feet tall. "We had to cut them with chainsaws," to clear them out to be destroyed, Sigley said. "That was a three-day operation, with 15 people." And so far this year, the department has received reports of about 250 additional grow sites ranging from backyards to large parcels to farms and public lands. In fact, in some parts of the county, where marijuana is grown is common knowledge, though not everyone is as worried about it as Carmen and Rogelio Lopez. In Seville, for example, Marina Gallo, 50, lived behind a home where medical marijuana was being grown until her neighbors stopped last year rather than challenge an abatement notice for violating the county's medical-marijuana ordinance. And residents of the tiny, rural town said pot still is being grown on at least two other homesites within a radius of just a few blocks. "I know it's everywhere," Gallo said, but added that as long as the growers and anyone associated with them keep to themselves, "It doesn't bother me." "Nobody really pays attention to that -- I don't," Pablo Jimenez, 19, another Seville resident, said about marijuana being grown near his family's home. "The guy over here, people know about it, but the guy leaves everybody alone." Several more Seville residents contacted declined to comment on the record, but some did say they weren't worried about medical marijuana growing close to them. That wasn't the case for Eric Gonzalez, 30, a married father of four from Seville who said, "The only thing that worries me is outsiders coming here" and causing trouble. And so far, that hasn't happened, he said. Still, he said he would prefer that medical-marijuana plants be grown farther away from nearby Stone Corral Elementary School and away from children who walk by the homes where the plants are grown. "I worry about kids because those walls are 10-12 feet high, and we can't see what's going on the other side," Gonzalez said. "Nothing has happened yet, but I am concerned with all this here. There might be robberies, people shooting people coming in to steal the marijuana," said Margarita Serrano, 51, another neighbor. Serrano, who frequently has children and grandchildren at her home, said she believes the county should crack down on people who violate medical-marijuana growing rules; those violations include growing the plants in residentially zoned neighborhoods. And some residents in Seville and other areas of the county have said they worry about whether growers might shoot at children or teenagers who go on their properties to try to see what's on the other side of the fence. Luis Jimenez, 27, is one of the medical-marijuana growers in Seville, but he doesn't worry that his activities put anybody at risk, including his three young children. Jimenez said he grows marijuana so he can treat his diagnosed stress condition. And if somebody shows up to steal his plants, he wouldn't fight or take any action to trigger a violent response, so the threats to his children and neighbors isn't a concern. Just the fact that Jimenez is growing his plants in a residential neighborhood and outdoors puts him in violation of the county's medical-marijuana ordinance, and he said he would stop growing the plants if he receives an abatement order. He said he already has received a letter from the federal government to notify him that authorities are aware of his activities and that his property could be permanently seized if he's found to be in violation of federal laws. But that threat wasn't enough to get Jimenez to stop. Still, Jimenez said he worries that the fervor by the county and federal government to go after illegal marijuana growers may end up hurting people who legitimately are growing marijuana for the purposes California's Compassionate Care Act intended. "There are people doing it for the right reasons," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt