Marijuana Growers Cultivate Crops on Public Land-VoiceofAmerica
Olympia, Washington 05 October 2006 | |
It's harvest season in the Northwest, not just for apples and wine grapes, but also for marijuana. That's why, as summer fades to fall, police in Washington and Oregon have taken to the air in search of large outdoor marijuana fields, or grows. The majority are planted on public lands and, police say, managed by Mexico-based drug cartels.
At 9 o'clock in the morning, at a small airport at the base of the Cascade Mountains, helicopters come and go. Police officers dressed in desert camouflage await their orders. This is the staging ground for what you might call Operation Marijuana Eradication.
Federal agents on a marijuana eradication operation |
Sheriff Harum says a decade ago the largest marijuana grows here were a few hundred plants. "Now we're talking 7,000; 8,000; 9,000 plants out there and they're trying their best to try and hide it from us because they know we're looking from the air."
In the air, high over the Wenatchee National Forest, Washington State Patrol pilot John Montemayor watches a Drug Enforcement Agency chopper below him, making low circles over a windy, tree-covered canyon. It's highly dangerous flying.
Marijuana gardens are a lighter green than surrounding vegetation |
Tommy Lanier, a former Forest Service special agent who now heads the National Marijuana Initiative, notes "All public lands are being inundated with this epidemic." He says in the Eastern United States, especially in the mountains of West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee, the grows are often the work of individuals. But here in the West, Mexico-based drug trafficking rings run the operations. "Those same organizations are trafficking in cocaine, trafficking in heroin, trafficking in illegal alien smuggling, trafficking in money laundering, trafficking in ID fraud, they're involved in all those things, but they make most of their money off the marijuana trade."
Lt. Wiley stands next to seized marijuana plants |
Gardeners live in tents like this one as they guard the marijuana plants |
Lt. Wiley says often the gardeners are paying off their debt for being smuggled into the U.S. "Frankly the people that in many cases are out tending the grows are folks that are trying to do the right thing by their family back home in Mexico. Yes, what they're doing is illegal. We don't approve it. But it's the organizations that are behind them, that are forcing them to do this, and that are organizing it, that we're really after."
Undercover narcotics officers load plants seized in the Wenatchee Forest into a truck to be taken away and destroyed |
Lt. Wiley is realistic. It's impossible to stamp out all the marijuana grows. But he takes pride in destroying drugs before they hit the streets, and in making public lands safer.
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