Hollister
– With marijuana harvest season only three months away, local
law enforcement officials are preparing for a busy summer
eradicating the cultivation operations in the rural areas of San
Benito County.
Hollister – With marijuana harvest season only three months away, local law enforcement officials are preparing for a busy summer eradicating the cultivation operations in the rural areas of San Benito County.

“There is going to be many opportunities to take advantage of the wet weather,” San Benito County Sheriff Curtis Hill said. “We’re going to be busy this year.”

For nearly a decade, dope farmers have taken up stakes in San Benito County. In 1999, law enforcement officials eradicated nearly 900,000 plants, Hill said. During that year, more marijuana was grown in San Benito County than any of the other 57 counties in California. However, that number has decreased significantly. In 2004, Unified Narcotics Enforcement Team agents seized and destroyed about 17,000 plants. Last year, agents confiscated 51,000 plants.

Before raiding a garden and destroying plants, officials have to secure financing and find the growing operations, Hill said. Earlier this month, Hill signed an agreement with the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting, a multi-agency state task force. CAMP will provide both money and manpower to aid in local eradication efforts. Federal programs also kicked in about $12,000 to pay for overtime to quash marijuana growing operations, Hill said.

The Sheriff’s department will work closely with UNET during the summer months to collect information on the growing operations and search for the gardens commonly found in rural south San Benito County. Searches are conducted by car and by helicopter patrols.

Hill’s philosophy on marijuana eradication hasn’t changed in nearly a decade.

“We look, we watch and then we try to take them down with people in the garden,” he said. “Making arrests are key because they can open up new leads.”

Most of the gardens are operated by the Mexican drug cartels. Arresting low-level gardeners can lead to other growing operations, but nabbing top cartel officials is a challenge, Hill said.

“Very rarely do we get the people who are actually responsible,” he said. “But we are getting the weed out of our county.”

The gardens are usually found in rural, nearly inaccessible areas and growers often go to great lengths to camouflage their operations. Marijuana continues to be a lucrative business in San Benito County. One plant can yield $4,000 worth of marijuana on the street.

“This has nothing to do with sick people or compassionate use,” Hill said. “This is about greed.”

The profit margins are prodigious in the illegal marijuana trade, especially in South San Benito County, said Sgt. Mike Rodrigues.

“The plants found in South county are typically high-grade sinsemilla,” he said. “A single plant can sell for up to $6,000.”

Sinsemilla marijuana, procured from unpollinated female plants, is seedless and highly potent. It fetches higher market prices than other strains of marijuana because of its potency.

The marijuana grown in rural South county usually makes its way to Hollister, said Police Chief Jeff Miller.

“The more we eradicate, the less it appears on the streets,” he said. “We have a tremendous drug problem in this city and marijuana is the gateway.”

Breaking the drug supply chain is central to crime prevention, Miller said.

“Drugs are a problem and there is a nexus between drugs and gangs,” he said. “You can’t stop one without the other.”

Miller said the problem is exacerbated by federal funding cuts. Federal grants for UNET and other anti-drug programs have decreased significantly, he said. The city’s Justice Assistance Grant has fallen from $40,000 in 2003 to $11,000 in 2006.

“We’re seeing less and less federal money,” he said. “We’re feeling the effects of that. You’re talking about an almost 75 percent reduction.”

The cuts forced Miller to pull one of his officers from UNET, leaving the program with only four full-time agents.

Brett Rowland covers public safety for the Free Lance. He can be reached at 831-637-5566 ext. 330 or [email protected].

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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