Pubdate: Sun, 29 May 2016 Source: Times Recorder (Zanesville, OH) Copyright: 2016 Times Recorder Contact: http://static.zanesvilletimesrecorder.com/contact/ Website: http://www.zanesvilletimesrecorder.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2740 Author: Kate Snyder, Reporter MUSKINGUM TOP IN MARIJUANA SEIZURES ZANESVILLE - From 2008 to 2014, 32,021 marijuana seizures in Muskingum County were reported to the Ohio Attorney General's Office, putting it at number one in the state. In 2010 alone, agencies in the county reported more than 25,000 seizures, which was nearly 25 percent of all marijuana seizures reported in the state 105,121. According to the data, Pike County and Franklin County were also top counties for marijuana seizures, and during the same time period, Perry County had 12,290 seizures reported. The data comes from the BCI's eradication program, which takes place between October and April each year. BCI agents assist local law enforcement in locating growing operations by flying by homes and communities in helicopters. According to the attorney general's website, BCI experts estimate a fully mature marijuana plant can be worth between $1,000 and $1,500 once processed and sold on the streets, and higher quality plants can fetch up to $2,000. In Muskingum County, according to the attorney general's data, marijuana seizures has dropped since 2010 to 780 in 2011, 447 in 2012 and 20 in 2013. In 2014, the number jumped to 159. According to Jill Del Greco, with the Ohio AG's office, these numbers do not reflect the exact number of marijuana seizures that occurred in Muskingum County. While agencies are encouraged to report seizures to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, not all of them do. So in Muskingum, as well as every other county in Ohio, the actual number of marijuana seizures could be higher. Especially because, Muskingum County Sheriff Matt Lutz said, as outdoor growing operations were shut down, more and more growing operations moved indoors, which makes them harder to find. Current technology could allow for someone to grow and cultivate a significant amount of marijuana from inside their home. "You can grow (marijuana plants) with grow lights and fertilizer and chemicals," Lutz said. Muskingum County is the fourth-largest county in the state by area, and with a population of only 85,000, that leaves plenty of room, Lutz said, to establish outdoor grow operations. "The same terrain you need for good deer hunting you need for marijuana," he said. In 2010, the biggest grow operation in Muskingum County and the state since at least 2008 netted thousands of marijuana plants. That operation had illegal immigrants living in the fields with the plants, which local law enforcement hadn't seen since a few years before when people were living in the fields of a grow operation in Perry County. The publicity both the 2010 and Perry County grow operations received in particular helped to spur the move among many similar operations to move out of the fields, Lutz said. Because the BCI, through it's ERAD program, cannot help small communities locate grow operations if those operations are inside, law enforcement has to get creative in finding and shutting down these establishments. "You kind of push those guys underground and see a lot more indoor grows," Lutz said. As a result, Lutz said officers rely much more on citizens to report suspicious activity, such as people going in and out of buildings or houses that citizens know to be abandoned or unfamiliar vehicles and people suddenly populating their community. Reports of cars parked along roads have helped law enforcement confiscate drugs, including marijuana. Zanesville Police Chief Ken Miller said his department doesn't run into marijuana grows too often - most have been outside of city - and when his officers do respond, it's usually to assist the Ohio Highway Patrol. OHP monitors the interstate and occasionally make busts through traffic stops and vehicle searches. "They've handled some pretty good seizures...coming through on the interstate and passing through Zanesville," Miller said. The department does have an officer appointed to the joint drug unit with the sheriff's office. That unit handles long-term drug investigations, he said. With the recent legalization of medical marijuana in Ohio, opinion remains divided on whether all types of marijuana should be legal. Lutz said in his experience, marijuana is a gateway drug and is nearly always present at busts primarily involving heroin, cocaine or methamphetamine. It's easy to grow, he said, and despite the trends toward heroin, cocaine and harder drugs, marijuana remains prevalent in the county. The way to curb the drug issues in the county has to be through rehabilitation and education as well as shutting down operations, Lutz said. With rehab, people who were once dependent on illegal substances can get out of that lifestyle and have a small but significant impact on drug use in the county. Also, by expanding the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program to sixth, seventh and eighth grades instead of just fifth grade, more young people will be aware of the effects of drug use and avoid it completely. "If you take away the demand, the supply has no place to go," Lutz said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D