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Mendocino National Forest Marijuana Bust: Officials Uncover Major Cannabis Operation On Public Property

07/29/11 08:10 PM ET   AP

Mendocino National Forest Marijuana

UKIAH, Calif. -- Law enforcement officials said Friday they struck a major blow against illegal marijuana cultivation on public lands in the heart of Northern California pot country.

The two-week operation to purge the Mendocino National Forest of illicit pot gardens uprooted 460,000 pot plants and led to more than 100 arrests, U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag said.

About 1,500 pounds of processed marijuana, 27 guns and 11 vehicles were also seized.

The 900,000-acre forest – larger than Rhode Island – spans six counties in a region of mountains and forests known as the Emerald Triangle for its high concentration of pot farms. Agents raided more than 50 gardens teeming with trash, irrigation pipes and chemicals that damage forestland and waterways, authorities said.

"The Mendocino National Forest is under attack by drug traffickers," Haag said.

The operation was part of an annual summer effort to eradicate marijuana from public lands across the state. Six sheriff's departments, the state anti-narcotics bureau and at least a half-dozen federal agencies took part in the effort in the forest.

Spearheading the raids was Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman, who in his years on the job has had to balance county medical marijuana ordinances with state law and the complete federal ban on the drug. Allman said none of the gardens busted showed any sign of being used to grow medical marijuana.

Each summer for the past several years, authorities report seizing millions of pot plants from local, state and national parks, forests and other wilderness areas. Public lands are often favored by clandestine growers for their remote locations and rugged terrain.

In previous years, officials have blamed Mexican drug cartels for some of the state's largest growing operations. Haag declined Friday to comment on where those arrested in the current operation were from but said 25 are already facing federal charges.

The decision to focus on Mendocino National Forest this year stemmed from citizen complaints a year ago about an increasing number of confrontations with armed guards protecting pot grows, Allman said.

Forest Service officials and county leaders have also long complained about the environmental consequences of illegal marijuana farms on forest ecology.

California National Guard troops, Forest Service workers and volunteers have removed 46,000 pounds of trash, 120 propane tanks, 116,000 feet of pipe, 13 manmade dams, 57 pounds of pesticide and tons of fertilizer from raided grow sites in the forest, Haag said.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
07:28 PM on 08/06/2011
46,000 pounds of trash, 120 propane tanks, 116,000 feet of pipe, 13 manmade dams, 57 pounds of pesticide and tons of fertilizer from raided grow sites in the forest.

Them hippies sure can pollute.
02:32 PM on 08/12/2011
Not hippies. Illegal Mexican workers smuggled in and treated as slaves by their cartel masters.
01:10 PM on 08/03/2011
i don't live in california plus i'm never without my herb so i don't care. let it be illegal.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joshmcdonald
01:11 PM on 08/02/2011
This article is NOT about the war on drugs. If you happen to have read this article and perceive that it is then please allow me to clarify:

Medical Marijuana is legal in California. Getting a license to grow it is not hard and compliance with State laws is actually not that big a deal. Yes, the Feds still don't like it and sometimes they cause a fuss, but for the most part (especially in Northern California) legal Marijuana grow and distribution is a vital part of our everyday lives.

This article is about illegal, large-scale grow operations run primarily by illegal immigrants from Mexico who represent one of several cartels and who protect "their" land (they don't own the land they grow on) with guns and a propensity toward violence. They pollute our National Forests and cause serious environmental damage.

Look, I have severe arthritis and smoke daily just so my hands don't ache typing this comment. I am as against the War on Drugs as anyone and feel it is a severe miscalculation of justice that so many non-violent drug offenders languish in our prisons. But the people being busted in this story are seriously deserving of incarceration.
04:54 PM on 08/02/2011
well said.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
06:17 AM on 08/02/2011
shoot thats nothing. Go to southern Illinois, Shawnee forest. There are no jobs in that area, but people driving new expensive cars and shopping at walmart all day long, partying all night. National forest there have been the growers area of choice as you only get busted if you get caught redhanded. And its HUGE business in southern Illinois.
09:45 PM on 08/01/2011
if it were legal you wouldn't have these massive grows on public lands.
you could grow your own, or buy it cheaply at a store.

Ask yourself, How well did alcohol prohibition work?
How well is marijuana prohibition currently working?
04:55 PM on 08/02/2011
You can do all that in California with medical marijuana.
02:05 AM on 08/03/2011
Unfortunately Chris I live in a less progressive "Red state". Not to mention the possible drug screen at the place of employment.

Alas I must wait until there are policy changes at the Federal level before I can enjoy one of life's simple pleasures.

I hope California fares better at the polls in the 2012 elections on this issue. As this might finally force a national debate and hopefully a change in the Federal Laws.
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dbrett480
02:55 PM on 08/01/2011
Whatever happened to the environmentalists supporting the protection of national forests? Or does their right to smoke pot outweigh this?
05:31 PM on 08/01/2011
It is more a reflection of your own cluelessness to lump people who grow herb with those who want a clean environment. Usually, people with your lack of critical discernment have difficulty not mistaking dog excrement with a tootsie roll, making you the last person to call on over Hallowen.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
06:16 PM on 08/01/2011
I can pretty much guarantee you that the same people that support these pot grows in national forests also oppose logging and drilling when the damage is essentially the same.
06:30 PM on 08/01/2011
Why so angry? He's only making the true observation that so many here think that growing weed is harmless and that legalization's end result will be clean environmental practices by all who choose to grow it. Both of these notions are false. I think it is also a fair assessment to assume that the majority of people commenting here are pro-environment.

As a side note I think your tone and writing style is more suited to a yahoo news forum, but i guess everyone is entitled to their right to free speech.
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ABACADABRA RABBIT
VOTE GREEN PARTY 2012
01:36 AM on 08/02/2011
Who says these criminals are environmentalists?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
07:27 PM on 08/06/2011
I never said that. But there is a care free attitude towards this just because the item being grown is marijuana (which is an invasive weed).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seadog123
01:21 PM on 08/01/2011
Great.....now where is Willie going to get his weed?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
01:03 PM on 08/01/2011
I wish I could just 'happen upon' something like that in a forest or park...That would be quite a find.
01:29 PM on 08/01/2011
you would get a gun shoved in your face, possibly shot at, or even shot, not exactly a pleasant experience.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
02:07 PM on 08/01/2011
Lol, well, yea...I mean without anyone there. Like a private grow that someone was trying to keep hidden.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
11:59 AM on 08/01/2011
Good work. Serious damage is done to our national forests by the cartel-run pot grows. But I guess if this gives college students the ability to get stoned it is worth it.
03:02 PM on 08/07/2011
What some people obviously cannot or refuse to understand is that the proverbial "college students" are going to get stoned if they so please. Whether the marijuana is grown legally or illegally, demand for the drug isn't falling by any means. Legalization would ruin the profitability of the illegal grows and smuggling operations, most likely leading to a safer Mexican-American border and a major reduction in the influx of non-violent "offenders" into our prisons. Legalization is the only answer and the sooner the old guard of Congress is replaced, the better.
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Moose Luck 99
Rand Paul is a LIAR!
09:51 AM on 08/01/2011
Hemp BIO-ENERGY
Hemp 6X more BTUS than Corn
Hemp uses less water no herbicides and little pesticides and fertilizer.

Subbituminous coal is common in the US. It has an energy content of about 18 million Btu per ton, and is used mostly in coal-fired power plants

Coal generates about half of the electricity used in the United States. ... Each person in the United States uses 3.8 tons of coal each year.

Some 965 million tons of coal were consumed for the generation of electricity. This amounted to 86% of total U.S. coal production

U.S. soybeans 76.6 million acres

U.S. corn 90 million acres

Half of the acres 83.3 million acres

Hemp yields an average of nine dry tons per acre
(more in southern areas)

749 million tons hemp fiber

Bio-diesel Hempoline can be made from leaves and stalks.

You would also have the hemp seeds as a food source too.

U.S. annual anhydrous ammonia 22.90 million tons used.

U.S. ROUND-UP use100 million pounds
Contaminated with 1,4 dioxane

HERO-INSECTIDE SYNGENTA INSECTICIDE Soybeans and corn
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seadog123
01:27 PM on 08/01/2011
Kudos, Mr. Moose. Only problem is the bureaucrats will never let it happen.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floridan56
06:29 AM on 08/01/2011
Just legalize it. Consider the reduced spending if we eliminated these busts. People would stop growing 'illegally' in such places etc. problem solved.
01:53 PM on 08/01/2011
It is legal to grow in California already. In Mendocino County you are permitted to grow 25 plants or less without registering and there is a process for growing up to 99 plants on your own private land which includes an inspection by local authorities (regulation) and a registration fee (taxation). You can and should produce somewhere around a pound to two pounds a plant, which means with 99 plants you can produce roughly 100 to 200 pounds per growing cycle. If using light deprivation techniques you can squeeze 3 harvests per year out of your parcel. So 300-600 pounds per parcel at $1500 a pound on the wholesale market equals $450K-900K per parcel that can be produced. Even if you only produce one harvest per parcel that means $150K-300K annually. Open up multiple private parcels through the form of 'medical marijuana growing co-operatives' and you can see how easy it is to earn huge profits for a group of medical growers. These raids were directed at individuals skirting this system by growing illegally (and destructively) on public land.

I am all for 100% legalization, but further legalization will only serve to lower the value of the product, and raise the cost of production in the form of taxes and much stricter regulation (probably with certain licensing required). This in turn would create the same incentive to produce a crop while avoiding taxes, licensing fees, appropriate working conditions, environmental regulation, etc etc etc
03:10 PM on 08/07/2011
The same incentive to avoid taxes exists in every division of our capitalist economy. Corporations out-source every day to avoid taxes and fair labor laws, often ruining the economies of entire regions (look at detroit, for example). The only difference is the federal government allows one but not the other.
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TheOuroborus
It's NOT paranoia if they really R out to get U.
12:03 AM on 08/01/2011
This is what law enforcement is focusing on? Pot. Really? I had hoped for change, but the change we got was in the opposite direction.
03:17 AM on 08/01/2011
Why is this so hard for so many of you to understand, they are focusing on protecting our national forests. The change we got was in the right direction. Under the Bush administration, cannabis dispensaries would periodically get raided by the DEA whether state and local authorities were with them or not. They no longer do, unless they are unlicensed by the city in which they are established and unwanted. This series of raids was a GOOD thing. I for one would like to go hiking in the beautiful redwood forests of northern Mendocino County without worrying about someone pointing a rifle in my face, or having my leg blown off by a shotgun trap. THANK YOU SHERIFF ALLMAN FOR HAVING YOUR PRIORITIES STRAIGHT. PLEASE CONTINUE TO PROTECT OUR PUBLIC LANDS FROM CRIMINALS. DO NOT LET ANYONE POLLUTE OUR NATIONAL FORESTS, NO MATTER WHAT ACTIVITY THEY ARE DOING.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
02:53 PM on 08/01/2011
There are plenty of places to grow legally in CA, just not national forests.
11:05 PM on 07/31/2011
Hey by the way, all those calling for legalizati­on and regulation should take a very good look at Sheriff Allman's website. Looks like it's pretty legal and regulated to me.

http://www­.mendocino­sheriff.co­m/services­/medicalma­rijuana/Co­mpliance20­10.pdf
03:23 AM on 08/01/2011
I guess the link to the pdf won't work here's the link to his general site, you will have to click the appropriate link yourself.

http://www.mendocinosheriff.com/
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BluePhantom2
The Blacksmith & the Artist reflected in their art
08:48 PM on 07/31/2011
This part of the "Drug War" is a waste of time and $$$. Legalize it, tax it and be done with it. It would take away the incentive to destroy our national parks and thats a good thing.
09:57 PM on 07/31/2011
It is legal in California for medical purposes, and taxed by local governments. This is one of the few parts of the 'drug war' that is a good thing. It won't be legalized anytime soon, and even if the federal ban is lifted, there will be many states and counties that keep it illegal. This is a serious problem that will continue even if it were made legal in all 50 states. Much the same way logging, oil drilling, mining, even commercial farming would be far dirtier industries without oversight and enforcement.

I understand the calls for 100% legalization. but your simple statement 'Legalize it, tax it and be done with it' will never exist. With legalization and taxation comes regulation. With taxation and regulation there remains the incentive to produce the crop while avoiding those added costs.

I really think that most people here have no understanding of what life is like in Mendocino and Humboldt Counties. EVERYONE up there either produces marijuana for a living, produces it for supplemental income, is employed directly in the industry, or runs a business that is dependent on those people spending their money at their establishments. Notice that these raids did not touch private property.
10:17 PM on 07/31/2011
There are large parts of Ca where med MJ is still illegal and many areas where it must be grown indoors. The law was written in a way that allows the local govt to ban the dispensaries that has held up in court
10:14 PM on 07/31/2011
The only thing that would change is it would be the FDA instead of the DEA enforcing the law.
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leftLibertarian
reefer+java=groovy
08:19 AM on 08/01/2011
No one should be enforcing some stupid law.
02:34 PM on 07/31/2011
Fold the DEA, and give those thugs jobs clipping buds.
10:15 PM on 07/31/2011
you mean trade the DEA for the FDA. That's all that would happen.
07:53 PM on 08/01/2011
Well, considering we're about to cut food inspection (because who needs that tyranny, right?), probably a good idea.