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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: OPED: Busting Pot Operations In The Forest
Title:US CA: OPED: Busting Pot Operations In The Forest
Published On:2008-08-22
Source:Visalia Times-Delta, The (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-25 12:33:59
BUSTING POT OPERATIONS IN THE FOREST

Thought I'd take a few moments and share with you some startling
statistics about marijuana sites in the Sequoia National Forest. Most
readers have likely heard about Operation LOCCUST (Locating Organized
Cannabis Cultivators Using Saturation Tactics), where 14 agencies
teamed up to remove marijuana plants, investigate and apprehend drug
trafficking individuals, and remove marijuana-growing infrastructure
on public land in Tulare County. In just two weeks, they put a
phenomenal dent in the marijuana cultivation activity in Tulare County.

Public safety is the Forest Service's impetus for addressing the
marijuana growing aggressively in the Sequoia National Forest and we
are partnering with others to vigilantly police these public lands.

Of the startling 482,158 plants eradicated, 312,994 were taken from
public land managed by the Sequoia National Forest. Additionally, law
enforcement confiscated 380.2 pounds of processed marijuana, 17
ounces of cocaine, 42.5 ounces of "ice" methamphetamine; made 28 drug
related arrests; seized 26 firearms, a vehicle and $6,900 in cash.
They have seven ongoing warrants; most from marijuana growing
operations conducted by armed drug trafficking organizations. These
organizations are primarily undocumented foreigners that pose a
significant threat to the public, Forest Service employees and to the
environment.

In past efforts, when marijuana was eradicated in Tulare County,
personnel and funding were not adequate to clean up the mess created
by growers. Thanks to volunteers from the High Sierra Volunteer Trail
Crew, supported by the Forest Service, more than 30 percent of the 51
grow sites located on the Forest were reclaimed.

In less than two weeks, these volunteers removed 245 bags (35,540
pounds) of trash which held 20 propane tanks, 4,195 pounds of
fertilizer, 22 pounds of pesticide, 33.5 gallons of chemical, and
165,556 feet (31 miles) of irrigation line. These volunteers
destroyed multiple make-shift structures that were built by the
growers, including benches, tables, two dams and 11 reservoirs.
Removal of this material will help restore the land to its natural
state and will remove the infrastructure which is imperative to deter
drug trafficking organizations from re-establishing their operations.

These drug trafficking organizations occupy public land for months at
a time, threaten public safety, cause fires, cut trees, build illegal
structures, illegally kill wildlife, pollute the watershed, create
massive trash problems and illegally use herbicides and pesticides.
These large sites strip the soil of its nutrients and stress local
indigenous species. Forest Service law enforcement and partner
agencies will continue to focus their efforts to disrupt and
dismantle drug trafficking organizations that are primarily
responsible for the marijuana cultivation occurring on the Sequoia
National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument.

We continue to address resource degradation issues and the effects of
marijuana growing that affect the watershed when chemicals and
materials and equipment are left on the landscape. We will be
diligent in our law enforcement operations and management restoration
efforts to reduce damage where marijuana growing occurs. Even though
Operation LOCCUST is over, we will continue to partner with law
enforcement agencies to manage and curtail marijuana cultivation and
work with volunteers and others to restore areas that have been degraded.
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