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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Thousand Oaks Raid Nets Pot Plantation
Title:US CA: Thousand Oaks Raid Nets Pot Plantation
Published On:2005-07-16
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-20 02:27:32
THOUSAND OAKS RAID NETS POT PLANTATION

Deputies Arrest An Alleged Caretaker Of The One-Acre Plot. The Ravine
Is Owned By Local Open Spaces Agency

Authorities on Friday arrested an armed man and confiscated nearly
800 pounds of marijuana plants being cultivated in a heavily wooded
ravine on public property in western Thousand Oaks.

Servondo Villa, 22, was arrested as dozens of law enforcement
officers raided the one-acre marijuana field shortly before 8 a.m.,
said Ventura County sheriff's spokesman Eric Nishimoto. A second
suspect may have escaped, he said.

"It's hard to nab these guys," Nishimoto said. "They know all the
ways out. They're pretty sneaky, pretty weaselly."

Villa, a resident of Los Angeles County, was booked on suspicion of
illegal cultivation of marijuana and being armed during commission of
a felony. He remained in custody at the Ventura County Jail in lieu
of $90,000 bail.

Sheriff's Sgt. Bret Uhlich said the department's narcotics unit had
spent two months coordinating the raid and monitoring the location,
where 760 plants were found during a 2003 raid. The high-grade
sinsemilla marijuana being grown this season had an estimated street
value of up to $2.4 million, he said.

The marijuana, planted along both sides of a natural stream on
property managed by the Conejo Open Space Conservation Agency, was
spotted by the Sheriff's Department's helicopter unit during a
routine inspection.

Uhlich said that during the April-to-October growing season such
large pot fields are more often found in remote portions of the Los
Padres National Forest in northern Ventura County.

The marijuana field's caretakers had set up a makeshift camp on flat
ground overlooking a small waterfall, authorities said. Their
weathered tent had two sleeping bags, and the area was littered with
food and supplies.

Along with a propane tank and a car battery rigged to serve as a
charger for cellphones, there were discarded fertilizer bags and a
canister with a pump handle for applying weed killer, authorities said.

This first major pot raid of the year in Ventura County was
coordinated by the Sheriff's Department. The raid included personnel
from the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, Oxnard police and a park
ranger for the open space agency.

After deputies and federal agents spent nearly two hours cutting down
the 5- to 6-foot-tall plants, they stacked the piles on large nets,
which were later lifted by the sheriff's helicopter and taken to a
nearby staging area. The marijuana was then trucked to the landfill
in Simi Valley to be buried, according to Nishimoto.
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