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News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: Marijuana Homes Dotting Streets In Quiet Suburbia
Title:US GA: Marijuana Homes Dotting Streets In Quiet Suburbia
Published On:2007-03-31
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 09:14:18
MARIJUANA HOMES DOTTING STREETS IN QUIET SUBURBIA

Growers Find Areas Make Easy Hide-Outs

LAWRENCEVILLE, GA - In Coldwater Creek, a middle-class housing
development outside Atlanta, the neighbors mind their own business and
respect one another's privacy - ideal conditions, it turns out, for
growing marijuana in the suburbs.

Police this month raided an utterly ordinary-looking red-brick house
on the block and broke up a pot-growing operation with 680 plants
arrayed under bright lights.

"You'd never know from the outside. I guess that's the idea," said
Doug Augis, who lives with his pregnant wife and a toddler in
Coldwater Creek. "That doesn't give you a really good feeling."

Across the country, investigators increasingly are seeing suburban
homes in middle-class and well-to-do neighborhoods turned into indoor
marijuana farms.

Grow houses have been a problem for years in California and Canada,
but investigators are starting to see scores of them in the South and
New England. In the past six weeks, more than 70 have been uncovered
in northern Georgia-nearly 10 times last year's total for the state.
Only one was busted in 2005. *

Indoor pot farms also have been discovered in recent months in
residential areas of New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, New York, North
Carolina and Florida.

Crackdowns in Canada and elsewhere apparently have led some operators
to parts of the United States where the public and police are less
likely to detect them, authorities say.

"They can go in and basically fly under the radar," said Ruth Porter-
Whipple, spokeswoman for the Atlanta field division of the Drug
Enforcement Agency.. "These aren't neighborhoods where they would stand out."

Billions Of Dollars Involved

In Georgia, the latest busts averaged about 200 plants per house. With
each plant yielding $4,000 on average per harvest, that works out to
about $3.2 million per year, considering the plants can be harvested
every three months.

The DEA said more than 400,000 plants with a potential annual value of
$6.4 billion were seized from grow houses in the United States last
year - up from about 270,000 the year before. That is less than 10
percent of the marijuana plant seizures in the United States; most pot
is grown outdoors.

Grow houses typically grow marijuana hydroponically - that is, using a
nutrient solution instead of soil. They also use 24-hour-a-day
lighting to produce plants more rapidly. The marijuana is usually cut,
dried and packaged on the premises.

Typically, the windows are covered, and the electrical system is
rigged to hide how much juice is being used.

Nearly all of the grow houses busted in Georgia were connected, police
say. Fayetteville resident Merquiades Martinez - a Cuban immigrant -
and his wife, a real estate agent, are accused of recruiting other
Cubans to buy houses that cost $300,000 to $450,000.

Investigators employed tips, surveillance and information from the
power company on electricity usage to find the Coldwater Creek grow
house and other operations.

The Heat Is On

It was a string of electrical fires that led New Hampshire authorities
to more than a dozen grow houses in December. Marijuana grow houses
often have rows of power strips and spaghetti clusters of extension
cords and other power lines.

"They are very sophisticated, probably the highest quality of
marijuana we've seen in years," said Lt Terry Kinneen,commander of the
New Hampshire State Police narcotics unit.

In another elaborate scheme, more than 50 houses with thousands of
plants recently found in Florida were traced to marijuana financiers
in New Jersey who offered "relocation packages," with 100 percent
financing for the homes. Buyers would agree to operate a grow house
for two years, after which they could sell the house and split the
profit with their backers or keep growing pot.
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