Pubdate: Thursday, Sept. 17, 1998 Source: Fayetteville (NC) Observer-Times Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/foto/news/opinion/eletter.html Website: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/ Author: Lora Hines Staff writer OFFICIALS ATTEMPT TO ELIMINATE MARIJUANA Narcotics agents from the Cumberland County Sheriff's Department came up empty-handed Tuesday during what probably will be the last marijuana eradication of the summer. Although the daylong search throughout the county didn't lead agents to fields of marijuana, Capt. Jack Watts said he isn't naive enough to believe people have stopped growing it. "We just didn't fly over the right spot at the right time," he said. This summer, agents searched the county about half a dozen times and found more than 300 plants. Almost all the plants were found during a July 21 search off Beard and Underwood roads near Stedman. About 75 plants were found off Camden Roads near Hope Mills. Agents have found about 300 plants a year in each of the past couple of years, Watts said. That might not seem like a lot, but 300 plants can be worth between $500,000 and $600,000. "It's still worth doing year after year," Watts said. "If we don't do it, it'll get out of hand. Marijuana is so readily available already." It isn't unusual for officers to find nothing during eradications, he said. Cumberland County is big, and spotters can't search all of it. It is hard to spot marijuana from the air, and some people are better at it than others, Watts said. "You've got to be good at what you're doing," he said. Agents especially like going out with National Guard helicopter pilots. The pilots are trained to look for marijuana. They look for it from the sky, while agents follow on the ground. "We only get so many fly dates a year with them," Watts said. National Guard pilots spend the summer helping agencies all over the state look for marijuana. In August, agents and pilots spent much of a day looking for marijuana plants without finding one. Just as they were about to go home with nothing, agents came upon five plants growing in a wooded area north of Fayetteville off Slocomb Road. "I've seen them spot one plant," Sheriff's Lt. David Cowart said. Despite the find, the agents were disappointed. "(In July), we found it everywhere we went," Sgt. John Smith said as he wiped sweat from his face. Photographs of agents posing among the 12-foot-tall plants they found hang on office walls. "This is just another day for us," Cowart said. "Next time, maybe we'll get 300 to 500 plants." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski