Pubdate: Wed 28 Oct 1998 Source: Hawaii Tribune-Herald (HI) Copyright: Hawaii Tribune Herald. Contact: http://www.hilohawaiitribune.com/ Author: Wayne G. Carvalho, Hawaii County Police Chief RESPONSE TO COMPLAINT ABOUT POT ERADICATION I'm writing in reply to a letter by Jerry Boiani that ran in the October 7, 1998 edition of the Hawaii Tribune Herald. In his letter, Mr. Boiani implied that on September 17, 1998 the Seaview Estates subdivision was "under seige by armed government 'air-piirates'" which he described as "15 to 20 police or military personnel" in three helicopters. I would just like to point out that this fallacious scenario described by Mr. Boiani was a bona fide marijuana eradication operation carried out by the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR). The police department did not carry out a marijuana operation that day. The Hilo Vice Section did, however, respond to a DLNR marijuana sighting on private property and, armed with a search warrant, searched the property and recovered 712 growing marijuana plants. As a result of the search, a female adult was arrested several days later at the residence for several drug offenses. The woman was released pending further investigation. During the investigation, vice detectives were approached by several residents who asked what was going on. The detectives explained that a criminal investigation was being conducted and the reasons for it. Mr. Boiani was totally incorrect in calling the DLNR operation a "military operation against a peaceful, unarmed, civilian population." Instead, it was part of a continuing enforcement effort against the illegal cultivation and production of marijuana on state-owned property. The DNLR operation was lawful and in concert with with state and federal laws. As far as a mandatory program review of the Police Department's "Counter Cannabis Field Operations," we welcome one. We are certain it will show that our marijuana eradication efforts each year have reduced product availability and suppressed cultivation operations as well as reclaimed hundreds of acres of both public and private lands once staked out by armed and threatening marijuana growers. Marijuana proponents paint an idyllic picture of peaceful "marijuana farmers" quietly communing with nature while getting high on their drug of choice. These proponents either ignor or are unaware of the lawlessness and violent crime prevalent during the mid-1970's through the mid-1980's, when marijuana growers on the Big Island took over both private and public lands, threatened passersby with weapons or booby traps and took pot shots at passing vehicles. It got so bad that growers who were discovered on private farmlands would retaliate by burning croplands, slaughtering livestock and destroying farm equipment. It got so bad that the utility companies were compelled to hire special off-duty police officers to protect their workers from threats or foul play when they were checking lines in rural areas. It got so bad that residents and visitors alike were afraid to hike in state and county parks and even in the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park for fear of being confronted by armed and threatening marijuana growers. It was only through the combined marijuana eradication efforts of the county, state and federal law enforcement agencies that we were able to reclaim both private and public lands for the enjoyment of the landowners and the public. The closer cooperation by federal, state and county law enforcement agencies was culminated after congressional hearings were held here in response to a public outcry about the mushrooming drug-related crime on the Big Island. And I'm certain that the vast majority of Big Island residents don't want to return to those days of lawlessness and rampant drug-related and violent crimes. Mr. Boiani was also mistaken in saying a woman who called the emergency 911 number could not get the police to respond to a life-threatening situation in Hawaiian Acres. In the woman's letter, she complained that the Hawaii County Police Department failed to dispatch a police officer to investigate an emergency 911 call she made to report hearing dogs bark and screaming from a passing car in the Puna subdivision of Hawaiian Acres. First, having listened to the tape of the conversation between the woman and the 911 dispatcher, I have found nothing that the dispatcher did wrong. The dispatcher was merely trying to elicit enough information from the caller in order to dispatch a patrol car to investigate. In addition, although no patrol car was available, as soon as one became available that evening, it was dispatched to the area to investigate. Finally, I'd like to say that Mr Boiani passed the boundaries of credulity when he compared the DLNR marijuana search operation on September 17 to the nazi atrocities faced by the Jews before and during World War II. To compare a lawful marijuana eradication effort by DNLR employees with the Holocaust and the murder of 6 million Jews is absurd. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry