News (Media Awareness Project) - US SC: York County Yielding High Amounts Of Marijuana |
Title: | US SC: York County Yielding High Amounts Of Marijuana |
Published On: | 2003-09-28 |
Source: | State, The (SC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 11:03:20 |
YORK COUNTY YIELDING HIGH AMOUNTS OF MARIJUANA
Authorities There Have Seized $21 Million In Plants This Year Alone
YORK - What is it about marijuana farming and York County?
This year, more than two-thirds of all marijuana plants seized in South
Carolina have been discovered in York County - 8,415 plants worth about $21
million.
And the six-week harvest season that extends through early November is just
starting.
Wilkes County, in the North Carolina mountains - once considered the
moonshine liquor capital of the South - has become known in recent years as
one of the state's largest growers of marijuana. But, Wilkes' total this
year - about 4,000 plants - is less than half of York County's.
"That's a lot of pot plants down there in South Carolina," said Wilkes
County Sheriff Dane Mastin. "The thing about pot is that it's hard to tell
whether folks are just growing a lot of it, or your local law enforcement
is just really good at finding it."
On Aug. 26, York County officers found 3,289 plants worth $8.22 million in
10 fields near Strait and Auten roads in southern York County. The bushy
plants ranged from 1 foot to 10 feet in height; it was the largest seizure
in county history. The plants were spotted from the air and then
coordinates were radioed to officers on the ground.
Most large-scale pot farmers are "guerrilla growers." They plant on land
they do not own, on utility right-of-ways and in reforested pine fields.
Prosecutors say it's practically impossible to make arrests in these cases
unless they catch the growers with the plants.
York County officials have made 13 arrests this year but most of those have
been connected to small-scale backyard busts - usually less than a dozen
plants in plastic planters.
'Every Time We Turned Around'
York County officers who are responsible for finding the pot - the official
term is "pot eradication" - are as perplexed as anyone about why they're
finding the record number of pot plants this year.
"The weird thing is we're basically doing the same thing we do every year -
we gather tips and we schedule flyovers (aerial surveillance)," said Lt.
Kelly Carroll Lovelace, a commander with the York County
Multijurisdictional Drug Enforcement Unit. "And we have about the same
amount (tips and flyovers) as we do every year. But this summer, it seems
like every time we turned around, there was another field of marijuana."
At first, Lovelace assumed the nearly 75 inches of rain in the past year
simply had made the pot plants more prolific and bushier. And possibly, the
rain helped in early spring to convince pot farmers to plant more.
Experts in pot plant propagation say perhaps the biggest factors in
successfully growing pot in the Piedmont are irrigation and 8-10 hours of
direct sunlight. Most pot fields are located near creeks. Growers
frequently use five-gallon buckets to hand-irrigate the plants, along with
a water-soluble fertilizer.
However, officials like David Mattox of the State Law Enforcement Division
say this spring's extra rainfall backfired on many pot farmers.
"It was too much too soon and we found numerous places where it simply
washed away the plants," said Mattox, who helps coordinate flyovers between
the S.C. National Guard and local law enforcement agencies. "Plus, the rain
and cloudy conditions cut back on the amount of sunlight."
'Neon Green' Plants
Statewide, SLED has counted nearly 13,000 marijuana plants seized this
year. There is still enough time in the growing season to surpass the 2002
peak of about 25,000 plants, but the numbers likely will not approach the
45,000 plants found in 1992.
In North Carolina, pot plant seizures are down from last year when 112,000
plants were seized; this year through mid-September, about 40,000 plants
have been confiscated.
So why has York County found enough pot to fill tractor-trailers while
adjacent counties like Mecklenburg, N.C., and Lancaster in South Carolina
barely have enough to fill a grocery bag?
"In a place like Charlotte, you're just not going to have a lot of
marijuana fields because there's not as much open land," said Sgt. Michael
Crowley of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police. "Plus, with a busy airport and
people flying all over the place like we have, somebody is going to spot
the pot. And pot growers know it will be spotted, so they don't plant it."
In many urban areas, pot farmers often move indoors and grow plants in
basement greenhouses lit with fluorescent lamps.
Law enforcement officials agree that flyovers remain the most effective
tool in eradicating outdoor pot plants. A trained pilot knows areas that
pot farmers prefer - near creeks and away from highways and houses. Pilots
look for the telltale "neon green" bushy plants which often stick out from
surrounding weeds and plants. Legendary SLED pilot Sonny Huggins, now
retired, could spot a single plant on a 500-foot-high flyover.
'People Are Going To Grow It'
Law enforcement officials say there's often conflicting connections between
the amount of pot plants being recovered and the amount of pot actually
being grown in a particular county.
"The facts are that marijuana is growing in practically every county," said
SLED Chief Robert Stewart. "My guess is that some counties like York are
just more aggressive in scheduling flyovers. And the only way you're going
to find pot fields are with flyovers, or a tip from a hunter or someone who
stumbles across a field."
York County Sheriff Bruce Bryant says pot plant eradication is a
labor-intensive process and virtually impossible without aggressive aerial
reconnaissance.
"You've got to have a plane or helicopter and a bunch of folks on the
ground to gather the pot. And let me tell you, it's a lot of hot, jungle
grunt work in those pot fields," said Bryant.
"The bottom line is whether we have enough rainfall or not, this is a
perfect place to grow marijuana and people are going to grow it. ... And if
you don't find it and cut it down, they're just gonna grow more of it."
Authorities There Have Seized $21 Million In Plants This Year Alone
YORK - What is it about marijuana farming and York County?
This year, more than two-thirds of all marijuana plants seized in South
Carolina have been discovered in York County - 8,415 plants worth about $21
million.
And the six-week harvest season that extends through early November is just
starting.
Wilkes County, in the North Carolina mountains - once considered the
moonshine liquor capital of the South - has become known in recent years as
one of the state's largest growers of marijuana. But, Wilkes' total this
year - about 4,000 plants - is less than half of York County's.
"That's a lot of pot plants down there in South Carolina," said Wilkes
County Sheriff Dane Mastin. "The thing about pot is that it's hard to tell
whether folks are just growing a lot of it, or your local law enforcement
is just really good at finding it."
On Aug. 26, York County officers found 3,289 plants worth $8.22 million in
10 fields near Strait and Auten roads in southern York County. The bushy
plants ranged from 1 foot to 10 feet in height; it was the largest seizure
in county history. The plants were spotted from the air and then
coordinates were radioed to officers on the ground.
Most large-scale pot farmers are "guerrilla growers." They plant on land
they do not own, on utility right-of-ways and in reforested pine fields.
Prosecutors say it's practically impossible to make arrests in these cases
unless they catch the growers with the plants.
York County officials have made 13 arrests this year but most of those have
been connected to small-scale backyard busts - usually less than a dozen
plants in plastic planters.
'Every Time We Turned Around'
York County officers who are responsible for finding the pot - the official
term is "pot eradication" - are as perplexed as anyone about why they're
finding the record number of pot plants this year.
"The weird thing is we're basically doing the same thing we do every year -
we gather tips and we schedule flyovers (aerial surveillance)," said Lt.
Kelly Carroll Lovelace, a commander with the York County
Multijurisdictional Drug Enforcement Unit. "And we have about the same
amount (tips and flyovers) as we do every year. But this summer, it seems
like every time we turned around, there was another field of marijuana."
At first, Lovelace assumed the nearly 75 inches of rain in the past year
simply had made the pot plants more prolific and bushier. And possibly, the
rain helped in early spring to convince pot farmers to plant more.
Experts in pot plant propagation say perhaps the biggest factors in
successfully growing pot in the Piedmont are irrigation and 8-10 hours of
direct sunlight. Most pot fields are located near creeks. Growers
frequently use five-gallon buckets to hand-irrigate the plants, along with
a water-soluble fertilizer.
However, officials like David Mattox of the State Law Enforcement Division
say this spring's extra rainfall backfired on many pot farmers.
"It was too much too soon and we found numerous places where it simply
washed away the plants," said Mattox, who helps coordinate flyovers between
the S.C. National Guard and local law enforcement agencies. "Plus, the rain
and cloudy conditions cut back on the amount of sunlight."
'Neon Green' Plants
Statewide, SLED has counted nearly 13,000 marijuana plants seized this
year. There is still enough time in the growing season to surpass the 2002
peak of about 25,000 plants, but the numbers likely will not approach the
45,000 plants found in 1992.
In North Carolina, pot plant seizures are down from last year when 112,000
plants were seized; this year through mid-September, about 40,000 plants
have been confiscated.
So why has York County found enough pot to fill tractor-trailers while
adjacent counties like Mecklenburg, N.C., and Lancaster in South Carolina
barely have enough to fill a grocery bag?
"In a place like Charlotte, you're just not going to have a lot of
marijuana fields because there's not as much open land," said Sgt. Michael
Crowley of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police. "Plus, with a busy airport and
people flying all over the place like we have, somebody is going to spot
the pot. And pot growers know it will be spotted, so they don't plant it."
In many urban areas, pot farmers often move indoors and grow plants in
basement greenhouses lit with fluorescent lamps.
Law enforcement officials agree that flyovers remain the most effective
tool in eradicating outdoor pot plants. A trained pilot knows areas that
pot farmers prefer - near creeks and away from highways and houses. Pilots
look for the telltale "neon green" bushy plants which often stick out from
surrounding weeds and plants. Legendary SLED pilot Sonny Huggins, now
retired, could spot a single plant on a 500-foot-high flyover.
'People Are Going To Grow It'
Law enforcement officials say there's often conflicting connections between
the amount of pot plants being recovered and the amount of pot actually
being grown in a particular county.
"The facts are that marijuana is growing in practically every county," said
SLED Chief Robert Stewart. "My guess is that some counties like York are
just more aggressive in scheduling flyovers. And the only way you're going
to find pot fields are with flyovers, or a tip from a hunter or someone who
stumbles across a field."
York County Sheriff Bruce Bryant says pot plant eradication is a
labor-intensive process and virtually impossible without aggressive aerial
reconnaissance.
"You've got to have a plane or helicopter and a bunch of folks on the
ground to gather the pot. And let me tell you, it's a lot of hot, jungle
grunt work in those pot fields," said Bryant.
"The bottom line is whether we have enough rainfall or not, this is a
perfect place to grow marijuana and people are going to grow it. ... And if
you don't find it and cut it down, they're just gonna grow more of it."
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