Pubdate: Fri, 29 Oct 1999 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 1999 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: 66 Jack London Sq., Oakland, CA 94607 Feedback: http://www.newschoice.com/asp-bin/feedback.asp?PUID486 Website: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/tribune/ Author: Jeff Chorney, Staff Writer EXOTIC AFRICAN DRUG FOUND DURING SAN LEANDRO ARREST SAN LEANDRO (CA) -- Police dug up a hillside garden designed to grow an exotic African drug Thursday in what might be the first bust of its kind in Alameda County. The drug is a stimulant knows as khat (pronounced "cot") and is chewed or made into a tea that produces a high similar to amphetamine, said San Leandro police Lt. Ian Willis. Investigators dug up 533 khat plants from the back yard of a house at 1210 Estudillo Ave. The plants weighted 833 pounds and have an estimated value of $150, 000. Willis said. Several guns and $27, 000 in cash also were recovered. Detectives still are looking into whether the family who now lives at the house was selling the illegal drug. "(But) with that amount of cash on hand and that many plants, we believe they were (selling)," Willis said. "That's a lot for personal use." Four family members who live there were arrested on suspicion of possession of a controlled substance. They are mother Fatima Algazzalt, 54; her husband, Albo, 63, and sons, Nadem, 22, and Rahbaan, 19. Police also searched a small grocery store run by the family called Better Trade Market ay 7838 International Blvd.. in Oakland. There they found another gun and more khat. The garden consisted of seven levels of terraced plots extending down a hill side beside the house. A gas-powered pump pulled water form the nearby San Leandro Creek, probably so the operation wouldn't attract attention with a high water bill, Willis said. The plants measured 2 to 3 feet tall, but can grow as high as 9 feet. Willis said, Small, young leaves are favored by khat users, who stuff the greenery into their mouths to get high, according to a University of Pennsylvania Web site of African studies. To the untrained eye, khat is an unremarkable bush. Though police have broken up growing operations in Monterey and San Jose, local narcotics detectives didn't know of any khat gardens ever found in Alameda County. People arrested for possession of khat have claimed to have it for religious or medical use, but Willis rejected that argument. "It's like an opium den -- saying that's cultural," he said. The Latin name for the khat plant is catha edulis or Celastrus edulis, which has been featured in American gardening guides -- minus, of course, any mention of the narcotic effect. Willis said, Khat also is known as qat, African tea, Mirra, and African salad. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea