80% of pot crop invades parks

phr

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80% of pot crop invades parks
Judy Keen
USA Today
9.12.08



CHICAGO — Mexican drug cartels are stepping up marijuana cultivation in national parks and on other public land, endangering visitors and damaging the environment, law enforcement and National Park Service officials say.

John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, says 75%-80% of marijuana grown outdoors is on state or federal land. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says there were more than 4.8 million marijuana-plant seizures at outdoor sites in 2006.

Tighter border controls make it harder to smuggle marijuana into the USA, so more Mexican drug networks are growing crops here, Walters says.

"We are finding more marijuana gardens in the park year after year," says Jim Milestone, superintendent of Whiskeytown National Recreation Area in Northern California.

"We're dealing with some bad characters," Milestone says. "We are arresting people … who have criminal records in Mexico, and almost all of them are here illegally with false papers."

The number of marijuana plants confiscated on public land in California grew from 40% to 75% of total seizures between 2001-2007, says the state's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting task force.

Hunting and cleaning up after pot growers diverts resources at a time when parks face chronic funding shortfalls, says Laine Hendricks of the non-profit National Parks Conservation Association.

Recent busts:

• A site with 16,742 marijuana plants was raided last month in North Cascades National Park in Washington state. It was operated by a Mexican organization, says park Superintendent Chip Jenkins.

People living at the site downed trees, dammed creeks and left 1,000 pounds of trash, he says.

• Thousands of marijuana plants were seized last month in Utah's Dixie National Forest. Ignacio Rodriguez was charged with drug and immigration offenses, says Michael Root, a DEA special agent.

The problem is worst on the West Coast, but law-enforcement pressure on growers, Root says, "has pushed them out this way."

• Last month, officials burned thousands of marijuana plants seized in Cook County, Ill., forest preserves. Drug organizations use the Chicago area as a base for distributing marijuana across the Midwest, says DEA special agent Joanna Zoltay.

• In July and August, officials seized more than 340,000 plants, some from Sequoia National Forest and Kings Canyon and Sequoia national parks.

Ranger Alexandra Picavet says Mexican cartels are responsible for many sites in those parks. They leave behind car batteries and propane tanks and poach deer and birds, she says.

Visitors to wilderness areas are at risk, says Shasta County, Calif., Sheriff Tom Bosenko. "We have found marijuana within a half-mile of public beaches and very short distances from campgrounds and highways," he says. "It's a shame."

Link!
 
phrozen said:
Hunting and cleaning up after pot growers diverts resources at a time when parks face chronic funding shortfalls, says Laine Hendricks of the non-profit National Parks Conservation Association.


Interesting choice of words =D
 
I'm surprised they haven't come across any booby-traps. These cartels are vicious, though, I don't understand why they are even necessary when marijuana is practically legal in CA. Anyone care to explain?
 
nonnihilnitoris said:
I'm surprised they haven't come across any booby-traps. These cartels are vicious, though, I don't understand why they are even necessary when marijuana is practically legal in CA. Anyone care to explain?

Export perhaps? There is a lot of fertile open land in CA, and liberal laws concerning the plant. Further east you travel the harsher the land and laws concerning the plant so it makes sense.
 
nonnihilnitoris said:
I'm surprised they haven't come across any booby-traps. These cartels are vicious, though, I don't understand why they are even necessary when marijuana is practically legal in CA. Anyone care to explain?

They had a special on this type of thing on the History channel. It wasn't specifically about marijuana growing in national forests. I think it was like 'The History of Hillbillies' or something and they mentioned marijuana growing in the Appalachian mountains and that they were very good at growing 'potent marijuana.' Police have been bitten by poisonous snakes, caught in bear traps, caught in wires with hooks in them at eye level etc. Pretty interesting. I guess this doesn't directly correlate with the Mexican cartels but I thought I'd still bring it up.
 
LoveAlways said:
How exactly is that endangering visitors??


From my knowledge about huge farms in the parks here in CA ( los angeles and smaller burbs)

the farms are watched by heavily armed men, because they cant just leave millions of dollars worth of plants just unwatched. they can be robbed by anyone, from teenagers to other gang members who have knowledge of where the plants are grown.

so lets say you stumble into there farms, you get greeted by a man who's not very happy and is carrying a very deadly weapon. try explaining yourself out of that one to someone who speaks no English

;)
 
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