Marin Independent Journal

State eradicates illegal marijuana plants

- By John Antczak

California’s annual campaign against illegal marijuana cultivatio­n eradicated more than 1.1 million plants and 20.5 tons of processed pot at 455 grow sites despite difficulti­es because of coronaviru­s precaution­s and massive wildfires, officials said Thursday.

The 13-week effort by state, local and federal agencies in 29 counties led to arrests of 140 people and seizures of 174 weapons, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra said.

The state Department of Justice’s Campaign Against Marijuana Planting has been conducted yearly since 1983. This year, time was lost to virusrelat­ed training and because of wildfires but the eradicatio­n topped last year’s total of just under 1 million plants.

“I think it’s safe to say that 2020 was CAMP’s toughest and most challengin­g season yet in its almost 40- year history,” Becerra said.

CAMP has long been associated with the forests and mountains of the far north, but this year’s biggest haul — 293,000 plants — occurred in Riverside County, which lies east of Los Angeles.

“I bet most people would have ventured a guess that all of the top counties would have been in Northern California but ... Riverside was by far the largest,”

Becerra said.

The rest of the top five were in the north, Tulare, with more than 105,000 plants, followed by Trinity, Lake and Siskiyou counties.

Becerra and other officials of the campaign noted that the effort has evolved into concerns about protecting land, streams, rivers from illegal pesticides and fertilizer­s, waterway diversions and trash associated with illegal marijuana grows.

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