Mexican marijuana cartels sully US forests, parks

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TRACIE CONE | October 11, 2008 09:27 PM EST | AP

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In this photo provided by the California Department of Fish and Game, two five gallon backpack sprayers used to spray pesticides directly on the buds of marijuana plants to keep the insects down are shown on Monday, July 28, 2008 at Longmeadow Creek in Tulare County near Johnsondale, Calif. (AP Photo/California Department of Fish and Game)

PORTERVILLE, Calif. — National forests and parks _ long popular with Mexican marijuana-growing cartels _ have become home to some of the most polluted pockets of wilderness in America because of the toxic chemicals needed to eke lucrative harvests from rocky mountainsides, federal officials said.

The grow sites have taken hold from the West Coast's Cascade Mountains, as well as on federal lands in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia.

Seven hundred grow sites were discovered on U.S. Forest Service land in California alone in 2007 and 2008 _ and authorities say the 1,800-square-mile Sequoia National Forest is the hardest hit.

Weed and bug sprays, some long banned in the U.S., have been smuggled to the marijuana farms. Plant growth hormones have been dumped into streams, and the water has then been diverted for miles in PVC pipes.

Rat poison has been sprinkled over the landscape to keep animals away from tender plants. And many sites are strewn with the carcasses of deer and bears poached by workers during the five-month growing season that is now ending.

"What's going on on public lands is a crisis at every level," said Forest Service agent Ron Pugh. "These are America's most precious resources, and they are being devastated by an unprecedented commercial enterprise conducted by armed foreign nationals. It is a huge mess."

The first documented marijuana cartels were discovered in Sequoia National Park in 1998. Then, officials say, tighter border controls after Sept. 11, 2001, forced industrial-scale growers to move their operations into the United States.

Millions of dollars are spent every year to find and uproot marijuana-growing operations on state and federal lands, but federal officials say no money is budgeted to clean up the environmental mess left behind after helicopters carry off the plants. They are encouraged that Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who last year secured funding for eradication, has inquired about the pollution problems.

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In the meantime, the only cleanup is done by volunteers. On Tuesday, the nonprofit High Sierra Trail Crew, founded to improve access to public lands, plans to take 30 people deep into the Sequoia National Forest to carry out miles of drip irrigation pipe, tons of human garbage, volatile propane canisters, and bags and bottles of herbicides and pesticides.

"If the people of California knew what was going on out there, they'd be up in arms about this," said Shane Krogen, the nonprofit's executive director. "Helicopters full of dope are like body counts in the Vietnam War. What does it really mean?"

Last year, law enforcement agents uprooted nearly five million plants in California, nearly a half million in Kentucky and 276,000 in Washington state as the development of hybrid plants has expanded the range of climates marijuana can tolerate.

"People light up a joint, and they have no idea the amount of environmental damage associated with it," said Cicely Muldoon, deputy regional director of the Pacific West Region of the National Park Service.

As of Sept. 2, more than 2.2 million plants had been uprooted statewide. The largest single bust in the nation this year netted 482,000 plants in the remote Sierra of Tulare County, the forest service said.

Some popular parks also have suffered damage. In 2007, rangers found more than 20,000 plants in Yosemite National Park and 43,000 plants in Sequoia Kings Canyon National Park, where 159 grow sites have been discovered over the past 10 years.

Agent Patrick Foy of the California Department of Fish and Game estimated that 1.5 pounds of fertilizers and pesticides is used for every 11.5 plants.

"I've seen the pesticide residue on the plants," Foy said. "You ain't just smoking pot, bud. You're smoking some heavy-duty pesticides from Mexico."

Scott Wanek, the western regional chief ranger for the National Park Service, said he believes the eradication efforts have touched only a small portion of the marijuana farms and that the environmental impact is much greater than anyone knows.

"Think about Sequoia," Wanek said. "The impact goes well beyond the acreage planted. They create huge networks of trail systems, and the chemicals that get into watersheds are potentially very far-reaching _ all the way to drinking water for the downstream communities. We are trying to study that now."

PORTERVILLE, Calif. — National forests and parks _ long popular with Mexican marijuana-growing cartels _ have become home to some of the most polluted pockets of wilderness in America because of...
PORTERVILLE, Calif. — National forests and parks _ long popular with Mexican marijuana-growing cartels _ have become home to some of the most polluted pockets of wilderness in America because of...
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Most people who live in the mountains here know all this. Surprise. People like to ignore such things everywhere. Violence, trash, pollution, etc.

It's clear the systems used in drug enforcement are counterproductive, repressive and foolish. I have seen local police enforcement out of control with people and needing a good set of lawsuits. They also focus so much on raiding drug patches they don't attend to other policing issues. Boars up here.

But legalize it? It's tiring to see so many workers and kids stoned so often. They are zombies. Because it "doesn't harm you" makes people seem to smoke it more. It does have long term affects. Smokers dumb down, stop growing emotionally, self-justifty like junkies, and lose focus in life because they cannot moderate. Of course, this doesn't mean you.

This won't be solved, legalized, etc., until people of both extreme sides of these issues start talking real. Don't hold your breath.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 AM on 10/13/2008
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"But legalize it? It's tiring to see so many workers and kids stoned so often. They are zombies. Because it "doesn't harm you" makes people seem to smoke it more. It does have long term affects. Smokers dumb down, stop growing emotionally, self-justifty like junkies, and lose focus in life because they cannot moderate. Of course, this doesn't mean you."

Way to over-generalize. I'm a scientist - I have a smoke now and then. I also know doctors, lawyers, business owners, engineers, and others from many walks of life that enjoy pot responsibly. If this "doesn't mean you", then don't freaking state your opposition as if that's exactly what you mean.

The fact of the matter is, pot is far less detrimental to individuals and society than alcohol. Do some research and you will find this overwhelmingly true.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 AM on 10/13/2008

I am a 25 year hiv survivor. The meds I take are so toxic that it can be compared to chemo, I have been through cancer (3x) too so I know what I am talking about.
MJ was the only way I could get thru the day, with the nauseas vomiting and diarrhea as well as the daily pain, I moved to a very rural area where I can not get it nor even seeds anymore to grow my own. I miss many days of meds because I just can not cope with the sickness from the meds any more. So I should just die because stupid a$$es made it unlawful due to racist attitudes 80 years ago.
I used to ive in fla and my connection there was a f n dea agent retired! He told me that was where he got it so we have a government that imports using our taxes and then convicts people for using it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 10/13/2008
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I think the original poster's comments go straight to the problem though.

This is another typical right vs. left argument. Both sides stretch their arguments enough that its easy for the other side to decide that the other is full of it.

Is pot as dangerous as alcohol? Probably not. Is it as dangerous as tobacco? Probably not.

Is it completely safe though? Probably not. It does increase accident risk. People who use it irresponsibly have a tendency to fall out of the economy. I have a problem believing that its not as cancerous as cigarrettes--though if someone smokes enough pot to get cancer from it, they've probably got bigger problems.

It has measured health/quality of life benefits for some, but it also has risks. If the NORML bunch stepped back a bit and put forward their best arguments while recognizing the best arguments of the other side, we might be able to start a conversation that would get somewhere.

Hmm....I wonder if we could apply that to other issues too?

The truth is in the grey....moderates unite!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 10/13/2008
- Wirehedd I'm a Fan of Wirehedd 3 fans permalink
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vague generalizations about being zombies and emotionally stagnant etc are all the same ridiculous falsehoods the govt has used in keeping cannabis illegal.

the PROVEN long term effect of heavy cannabis use is bronchitis like coughs and slight weight gain. not much more.

the people who claim otherwise are simply spouting propaganda talking points or are talking out of their anus.

simple as that.

legalization will eliminate BILLIONS of dollars of wasted law enforcement funds, free up thousands from prison sentences and allow for sick people to use a medicine that has been known to be safe and effective for centuries.

cannabis is only illegal for politically leveraged control by pharma, petroleum and paper based corporations who would almost be destroyed by the introduction of a known plant that can replace all three industries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 10/13/2008

the government has had for many years directed the common person to associate weed with the hard core drugs such as coke and crack. the big difference is that no one has ever died from smoking pot ever! lighting up a cigarette and drinking a beer cause way danger than lighting up a joint. They can't even establish weed to have addictive qualities such as crack or meth. Just do all of us a favor and LEGALIZE MARIJUANA!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 AM on 10/13/2008
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these people are souless idiots! weed grew wild all over america 100 years ago. now it's turned into crazy people using raids and poisons to kill the earth and people smoking their rat poison weed! it has to be government funding this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 AM on 10/13/2008
- NURREDIN I'm a Fan of NURREDIN 13 fans permalink
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Just remember one thing: If America wasn't full of so many damn "Junkies" we wouldn't have this problem. One more thought: I don't know about other towns,but here in Vegas,if I wanted drugs,it would take me about twenty minutes to find anything I wanted,from prescription drugs all the way to heroin. Now if I, a regular citizen, can go out and find all this stuff,why can't the D.E.A.? Someone, somewhere is getting paid off, and I sincerely believe all these so called "drug busts" are propaganda so we can feel that our government is doing something. There's too much money involved for there not to be some politicians (of both parties) looking the other way. Why is it always the street "vendors" getting busted but never the distributors? We know where the cocaine is grown, so why don't we napalm it? We know where all the poppies are being grown, so why don't we napalm it? We know there's a big drug war going on south of the border,so why don't we send in the troops and give the Mexican government some help? SOMEBODY'S GETTING PAID!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 AM on 10/13/2008
- 3dtrix I'm a Fan of 3dtrix 196 fans permalink

Alert the media!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 AM on 10/13/2008
- Punkynsnow I'm a Fan of Punkynsnow 52 fans permalink
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Ummm... Napalm? Not exactly an environmentally friendly chemical. That's like lighting birthday cake candles with a blowtorch.... you'd light the candles but destroy the cake.

Legalization would be a better idea. Alcohol and tobacco are both addictive, yet they are legal and the government makes tax profits off them. Is marijuana that much worse?

Pot smoking is a fact of life. You're never going to get rid of it. Look what happened to the US during Prohibition. People didn't stop drinking alcohol, but the illegal booze trade created a nice organized crime syndicate.

I'd rather see American farmers make money off marijuana than foreign drug cartels....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 AM on 10/13/2008
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NURREDIN's profile:
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K. D. Nurredin is the owner of two successful Las Vegas companies, Summerlin Investments, and Vegas
Flava Entertainment. After several years as one of Fidelity Investments most successful and celebrated
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 10/13/2008
- NURREDIN I'm a Fan of NURREDIN 13 fans permalink
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And you have a problem with what I do for a living?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 10/14/2008
- darthdarcy I'm a Fan of darthdarcy 48 fans permalink
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Ironic illegal criminal aliens are growing pot in our national forests but if a farmer in Kentucky who fought in our wars plants even industrial hemp to use a fuel he goes to jail, and the Feds take everything he owns and then makes him pay them hundreds of thousands of dollars..when he gets out years later..!

Those who support the war on drugs as it is waged especially against marijuana are actually in with the criminal drug dealers and wish the money to flow into their pockets and out of America..!

If we legalized both Industrial hemp and marijuana it would cut off billions of dollars going into these criminal enterprises in Mexico and elsewhere..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 AM on 10/13/2008
- bartonfink I'm a Fan of bartonfink 37 fans permalink
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no one is going to stop smoking. ever. decriminalize this stuff, or better yet, legalize it and collect tax revenue. it's a stretch to think something that makes so much sense could actually be considered, much less adopted, by the ship of fools that is our gov't, but they will never win this battle.

only a fool continues to allocate resources with no return

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 10/12/2008
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Last time they said that smoking pot was supporting the terrorist now it's' affecting the environment.
I can't wait for the next reason to keep it illegal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 10/12/2008
- andvoodoo2 I'm a Fan of andvoodoo2 122 fans permalink
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This article is further proof that marijuana needs to be legalized NOW! The "war on drugs" is a joke. Legalize it, tax it and spend the money once spent on trying to win the hopeless "war on drugs" instead on REAL drug education and treatment for those who want to quit any drugs - including the most deadly ones like alcohol and tobacco.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 10/12/2008
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Even the Mexican government announced last week that it was going to start treating drug addiction rather than imposing jail sentences.

There never has nor will there ever be a way to legislate what people do to their own minds and bodies and it is a huge economic burden to try and enforce thrm to do so. Make it legal and tax it and regulate it. We do it with alcohol and alcohol is a major contributor to crime and deaths across the nation that we Joe Six-Packs seem very happy and proud to accept.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 10/13/2008

Where is the proof in this article linking the plants with "Mexican Drug Cartels?" All I got from this is more Californians are planting seeds in the national parks. How dare the United States Government blame Mexico for it's own citizens. Since when have fertilizers been bad for plants? I thought that was the point.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 10/12/2008
- andvoodoo2 I'm a Fan of andvoodoo2 122 fans permalink
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Chemical fertilizers that are good for one plant can be bad for others. And, the article mentioned banned chemicals were being used and found. The chemicals may be devastating for animals and water sources.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 PM on 10/12/2008
- 3dtrix I'm a Fan of 3dtrix 196 fans permalink

Sorry to bust your bubble - but it's the law of unintended consequences; pot is bulky and difficult to transport - in the post 9/11 era it's easier for the cartels to send their people here than their pot - so they grow it closer to market on appropriated land. As for the chemicals - toxics are toxics, and erosion is a common, but not very headline-worthy (although serious) by-product of pirate agriculture - and they carry heat - hippies don't by definition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 10/13/2008
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well, all the deep forests are sacred! last areas left, all their stupid ignorance will pay deeply. and the morons that would smoke pesticide grown weeds deserve to die with them. hemp was wild weed all over usa 100 years ago. it's turned into mexicans coming over to destroy life itself so some fat suburbinite kid can get high and get cancer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 AM on 10/13/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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.
It is interesting that comments for thio story are about 98% pro legalization.
.
Nobody can make a rational case for keeping cannabis illegal. They are left with essentially saying they were told that it was bad when they were growing up and anybody who disagrees should be in jail.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 PM on 10/12/2008
- sloreader I'm a Fan of sloreader 17 fans permalink

Spending huge portions of the budget for the war on drugs finding pot farms in the forest is pure folly. Stemming the tide of meth, heroin and coke should be the top priority for every dollar budgeted to every police agency, period, end of story. Taxpayers are burdened enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 10/12/2008
- 3dtrix I'm a Fan of 3dtrix 196 fans permalink

Please look at the big picture - spending the money is NOT about finding the farms or labs - it's about injecting significant funds into a feedback loop that endorses and pays for "get tough on - crime, drugs, terrorists, gays", you name it - candidates at all levels. Keep the drugs illegal - the feedback loop is infinite. Regulate the drugs, and the loop is broken. Can't have that, now can we?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 10/13/2008

RE "Keep the drugs illegal - the feedback loop is infinite." Anyone think this sounds analagous to "Keep Osama bin Laden unapprehended?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 10/14/2008
- Trilby I'm a Fan of Trilby 10 fans permalink
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This is ridiculous. You can't grow good weed in a forest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 10/12/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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.
Have you ever smoked anything grown in the fields and forests of Thailand, Afghanistan, Columibia, Panama ?
.
This weird indoor gro-op stuff may be powerful but it lacks the harmonic beauty of naturally grown premium varieties.
.
Since there are undoubtedly drug agents reading this, I would like to add that it must be very embarassing to arrest cannabis users and suppliers since any reasonably informed person knows that cannabis is far less harmful that alcohol and tobacco.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 PM on 10/12/2008
- avraamjack I'm a Fan of avraamjack 21 fans permalink
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.
embarassing, assuming you have a conscience, of course.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 PM on 10/12/2008
- Wirehedd I'm a Fan of Wirehedd 3 fans permalink
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ummmm, yes, you can. as long as they get sunlight directly for more than 6 hours a day and indirect for 6-7 more hours a day and you're golden.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 AM on 10/15/2008
- Truthdude I'm a Fan of Truthdude 2 fans permalink
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Legal Now!

So I can be a cop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 10/12/2008
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So this is the War on Drugs? It's retarded...so much useless waste...if people could grow their own, like basil or mint, this wouldn't happen. But as it is now you risk serious consequences just to grow...a plant?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 10/12/2008
- bartonfink I'm a Fan of bartonfink 37 fans permalink
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you said a lungful

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 10/12/2008
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Pot laws exist to demonize those who otherwise are no threat, but just may be inclined to question the status quo. It is a political motivated law with no basis in reality for its existence.

Legalize!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 10/12/2008
- oxygen I'm a Fan of oxygen 28 fans permalink
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big pharma doesn't like people growing their own medicines or intoxicants, they are in bed with big government, big police and prison and lawyer groups who all make money on it's illegality on the back of common sense and freedom

I recently got some of the "indica" variety and at my age of 50 was shocked to see how effective and different it is from the old sativa stuff - I have terrible muscular arm ligament bone problems and the stuff works great with yes some intoxication but not like the really lost feeling you get from a sativa so there is much more to this story and hopefully barack will work on this problem also

there simply is no scare tactics that can work anymore, we've been b.s.'d about this just like with religion for too long - it would reduce crime, (and pollution in national parks and elsewhere, make people feel like freedom was a truth, reduce healtcare costs, reduce violence domestic and otherwise - it is simply pathetic it is illegal at all -and all or most of our ancestors used it knowingly or not in all these medicines of years ago soe we insult our own ancestors who busted their butts to get us here and never had a problem with it -?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 10/12/2008
- Wirehedd I'm a Fan of Wirehedd 3 fans permalink
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diggin that LOG

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 AM on 10/15/2008
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