Preacherman
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From the Billings Gazette (http://www.billingsgazette.com/inde...3/12/16/build/nation/65-marijuannagrowers.inc):
Pot guards endanger land users
Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Mexican cartels have taken over much of California's marijuana farming, boosting both the potency of the drug and the propensity for violence from armed guards protecting the crop, the nation's drug czar said Monday.
They're planting huge marijuana plots on public lands, creating a growing danger to hikers and hunters stumbling into the line of fire, said John Walters, director of National Drug Control Policy, in advance of appearances today in Reno and South Lake Tahoe, Nev.
California's Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement estimated that 84 percent of plants seized this year were controlled by Mexican gangs, in what the bureau called "a major strategic and organizational shift" from recent decades.
"Many people think of marijuana growing as just run by a bunch of guys who are Cheech and Chong in the movies, kind of fun-loving guys," Walters said in an interview with The Associated Press. "These are violent organizations. They're using violence without hesitation - it's part of doing business to them."
The multibillion-dollar Mexican cartels have discovered it's safer and more profitable to grow marijuana in the United States than to try to smuggle it across the border, he said. Instead, they're often importing guards and handing them firearms with orders to shoot at anyone coming by.
They're also branching into methamphetamine production, often using what authorities have dubbed "super labs." And this summer authorities for the first time discovered 40,000 opium poppies growing in a remote area of the Sierra National Forest bordering Yosemite National Park. The poppy plants originated in Mexico, Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Richard Meyer said Monday.
"The public lands have become a preferred area of operation for these organizations that are increasingly violent and sophisticated," Walters said. "People think they're hiking in a remote wilderness area, and they come across these plots or these labs and they're run by armed and violent criminals."
Three-fourths of the marijuana gardens discovered by California authorities this year were on public lands like state and national parks and forests. As recently as 2001, the majority of plants were seized from private land.
California's recent harvest season was one of the most violent in years.
In just one deadly week in September, law enforcement officials in Northern California fatally shot four armed guards protecting marijuana plantations. San Luis Obispo County sheriff's deputies were shot at as they entered a garden; a hunter walking near a marijuana grove in Los Padres National Forest was shot at by three men armed with automatic weapons; and guards tending a Ventura County garden shot at a backcountry hunter.
Federal, state and local drug agents are working up models that can better predict where the drugs will be grown or made, Walters said. In addition, the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management are making drug enforcement a bigger priority, which he said should make next year a record year for fighting drug activity on public lands.
Twelve California raids netted seizures of at least 10,000 plants this year, and one plantation had more than 70,000 plants. The average raid resulted in a seizure of 2,500 plants. The CAMP program seized a record 466,054 plants this year - up 100,000 plants from last year with a street value law enforcement officials estimated at $1.9 billion. They also seized 50 weapons.
State and federal agents said growers are using a higher grade marijuana with much more of the active component tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC.
Marijuana that had a 1 percent concentration of THC in the 1980s and perhaps 4 percent in the 1990s now has a national average of 7 percent to 9 percent. The potency can reach 13 percent to 15 percent in marijuana grown outdoors, and near 30 percent indoors, Walters said.
Those high concentrations mean more profit per pound as well. Marijuana that went for $2,000 a pound in 1983 sells for $4,000 to $10,000 per pound 20 years later.
Pot guards endanger land users
Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Mexican cartels have taken over much of California's marijuana farming, boosting both the potency of the drug and the propensity for violence from armed guards protecting the crop, the nation's drug czar said Monday.
They're planting huge marijuana plots on public lands, creating a growing danger to hikers and hunters stumbling into the line of fire, said John Walters, director of National Drug Control Policy, in advance of appearances today in Reno and South Lake Tahoe, Nev.
California's Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement estimated that 84 percent of plants seized this year were controlled by Mexican gangs, in what the bureau called "a major strategic and organizational shift" from recent decades.
"Many people think of marijuana growing as just run by a bunch of guys who are Cheech and Chong in the movies, kind of fun-loving guys," Walters said in an interview with The Associated Press. "These are violent organizations. They're using violence without hesitation - it's part of doing business to them."
The multibillion-dollar Mexican cartels have discovered it's safer and more profitable to grow marijuana in the United States than to try to smuggle it across the border, he said. Instead, they're often importing guards and handing them firearms with orders to shoot at anyone coming by.
They're also branching into methamphetamine production, often using what authorities have dubbed "super labs." And this summer authorities for the first time discovered 40,000 opium poppies growing in a remote area of the Sierra National Forest bordering Yosemite National Park. The poppy plants originated in Mexico, Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Richard Meyer said Monday.
"The public lands have become a preferred area of operation for these organizations that are increasingly violent and sophisticated," Walters said. "People think they're hiking in a remote wilderness area, and they come across these plots or these labs and they're run by armed and violent criminals."
Three-fourths of the marijuana gardens discovered by California authorities this year were on public lands like state and national parks and forests. As recently as 2001, the majority of plants were seized from private land.
California's recent harvest season was one of the most violent in years.
In just one deadly week in September, law enforcement officials in Northern California fatally shot four armed guards protecting marijuana plantations. San Luis Obispo County sheriff's deputies were shot at as they entered a garden; a hunter walking near a marijuana grove in Los Padres National Forest was shot at by three men armed with automatic weapons; and guards tending a Ventura County garden shot at a backcountry hunter.
Federal, state and local drug agents are working up models that can better predict where the drugs will be grown or made, Walters said. In addition, the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service and Bureau of Land Management are making drug enforcement a bigger priority, which he said should make next year a record year for fighting drug activity on public lands.
Twelve California raids netted seizures of at least 10,000 plants this year, and one plantation had more than 70,000 plants. The average raid resulted in a seizure of 2,500 plants. The CAMP program seized a record 466,054 plants this year - up 100,000 plants from last year with a street value law enforcement officials estimated at $1.9 billion. They also seized 50 weapons.
State and federal agents said growers are using a higher grade marijuana with much more of the active component tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC.
Marijuana that had a 1 percent concentration of THC in the 1980s and perhaps 4 percent in the 1990s now has a national average of 7 percent to 9 percent. The potency can reach 13 percent to 15 percent in marijuana grown outdoors, and near 30 percent indoors, Walters said.
Those high concentrations mean more profit per pound as well. Marijuana that went for $2,000 a pound in 1983 sells for $4,000 to $10,000 per pound 20 years later.