Pubdate: Wed, 25 May 1999 Source: Lompoc Record (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Lompoc Record Contact: http://www.lompocrecord.com/ Author: Matt Carter, Record Staff Writer BY MATT CARTER As he surveyed the nine marijuana plants Lompoc Police discovered in the closet of a local residence Monday, narcotics Detective Joe Stetz was angry. It wasn't the biggest bust in recent memory - Lompoc police seized 2 pounds of marijuana and more than four ounces of cocaine in a February raid on North F Street - it was where the plants were discovered that bothered Stetz. The plants, and a small amount of methamphetamine, were confiscated during a raid at 335 South A St. - directly across the street from Hapgood Elementary School. "I was just shocked that somebody was arrogant enough to do it right across the street from the school," Stetz said. Arrested at the residence on suspicion of felony possession of a controlled substance (about a gram of methamphetamine) was Lloyd Guerrero Olvera, 44. Olvera, who was released on $5,000 bail, and another resident of the house, Theresa Ray, 45, could also face felony marijuana cultivation charges, police said. To add insult to injury, Hapgood fifth-graders are scheduled to attend graduation ceremonies Wednesday night for DARE, an anti-drug program designed to teach them that illegal drugs are addicting and dangerous. Hapgood Principal Jesse Bass said that while he was surprised that drugs were allegedly discovered across the street from his school, the campus is secure and there have been no drug problems there. Bass said he and teachers at the school will explain what happened across the street to any students who ask. "I think you handle it head on, you don't mince words," he said. "We'll let the kids know those people are in trouble and it's not going to go away." All 104 of the school's fifth-graders are participating in DARE drug education activities, he said. "It's a real critical time period to get that message ingrained, and hope it sticks. If the message isn't firm here it won't be remembered." Residents of the South A Street residence raided by police wouldn't talk to the Record. But police said they were told the marijuana was grown for personal use only. Stetz said there is no hard evidence to suggest otherwise, so stiffer penalties for selling drugs near schools will probably not apply. Dale Gieringer, coordinator for the California chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said laws criminalizing home cultivation of pot are unjust. "I think it's absurd they would rather have people buy it from Mexican narco-traffickers," Gieringer said, pointing out that buying small quantities of marijuana on the street is only a misdemeanor. "I think it's crazy they would arrest somebody at their home for growing pot." According to Gieringer, there are "20 times as many people in prison for pot than at the beginning of the 1980s, when this pot war started, yet use remains unchanged." Stetz said the "grow room" in the house's closet - complete with heater, humidifier and a high intensity grow lamp - was the first step in a larger marijuana cultivation effort. Police found seeds and fluorescent lights that they said were to be used to convert the residence's garage into an indoor marijuana patch. "They were going to make a bigger grow in the garage, but we found them before they set it up," Stetz said. He said full-grown marijuana plants are worth about $400 each. The raid was carried out under the authority of a search warrant police obtained after gathering evidence that methamphetamine was being sold at the house, Stetz said. The plants and any equipment police believed was being used to grow them - including four fluorescent light fixtures and a 430-watt grow lamp - was confiscated. The grow lamp, made by Petaluma-based Hydrofarm Gardening Products, still had a $295 price tag on its box. The company's vice president, Peter Wardenburg, said Hydrofarm does not sell directly to consumers, and that most retailers will not sell equipment to people who indicate they are doing something illegal. He said the lamps are used by greenhouses, universities and even NASA. "There's one plant that people can grow that's illegal. There are 10 million plants people can grow that are legal," Wardenburg said. Stetz said that the surprise find of the alleged marijuana patch demonstrates the importance of targeting low-level drug activities - a job that Lompoc Police did especially well for the 69 days they had a four-man narcotics team. During that period, the team executed 26 search warrants and made 149 arrests. Now, because money for the team is no longer available, Stetz is the sole full-time narcotics officer. "We cleaned house when we did that," Stetz said of the narcotics team. "We had the drug dealers running from us instead of each other." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D