Pubdate: 29 Sep 1998 Source: Tri-City Herald (Kennewick, Pasco, Richland, WA) Contact: Website: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/ Author: Genoa Sibold-Cohn, Herald staff writer FRANKLIN COUNTY EYES MARIJUANA PLANTS FROM SKY There's a lot more growing in Franklin County fields than corn and potatoes. Also tucked into some of those fields is the leafy green plant often referred to as "pot." Each year, the Franklin County Sheriff's Department conducts aerial searches over the county in an effort to keep the illegal drug off the streets. Last week, Undersheriff Kevin Carle confiscated 36 marijuana plants that had been hidden in asparagus and corn fields. He spotted the plants from a Bergstrom Aircraft plane. The plants had an estimated street value of $108,000, or $3,000 to $3,500 per plant. Carle has been conducting the searches for 15 years at the end of summer and during harvest season. The department gets $8,000 to $12,000 a year from federal grants for the aerial searches. "It's a little unusual to find this many this year, because you usually have an off-year," Carle said. "I wasn't expecting to see a lot this year." He found eight plants last Tuesday in the middle of asparagus fields on a 100-acre plot of land. The plants stood 8-20 inches tall, towering over the asparagus. On Friday, 28 plants that were 5 to 6 feet tall were found among 12-foot corn stalks on a 50-acre spread. "These plants looked like Christmas trees," Carle said. "It was so easy to spot. We probably could have spotted it from the ground." Carle said they don't know if the plants belonged to the landowners or to phantom growers using the fields as a hiding place. Because of that, he said officials typically just confiscate the crop and don't try to catch the person responsible. "If it's theirs, they're not going to admit it," he said. "And it would cost an awful lot of money for surveillance, and what would really happen to them?" Marijuana growers use the fields because they are irrigated and fertilized during the season, which means the growers don't have to worry about getting caught while tending the crop. "We're just taking dope off the streets and out of the hands of our kids today," Carle said. "It's gratifying knowing that you're doing something for the community." Copyright 1998 Tri-City Herald. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake