The Taos News

Police raid all but ends an illicit cannabis-growing operation

FBI, the U.S. Marshals Service and Drug Enforcemen­t Agency seize massive crop in Shiprock

- By ED WILLIAMS AND DON J. USNER

A coalition of 20 federal, state and tribal law enforcemen­t entities descended on a network of Shiprock farms on Nov. 9, capping a monthslong investigat­ion into illegal marijuana cultivatio­n and possible labor traffickin­g on the Navajo Nation.

Throughout the day, teams of law enforcemen­t officers — including agents from the FBI, the U.S. Marshals Service and the Drug Enforcemen­t Agency — removed marijuana plants by the thousands, loading them onto dump trucks and burying them in large pits.

Law enforcemen­t will not yet comment on the volume, but San Juan County Sheriff Shane Ferrari described the seizure as an amount that will “knock you back in your chair.” Navajo Nation police had previously reported that only five of 36 cannabis farms remained in operation; if true, the enormous piles of plants confiscate­d this week would be only a fraction of what was growing a few months ago.

The action came on the heels of a Sept. 23 investigat­ion by Searchligh­t New Mexico revealing that a network of farms on Navajo land, operating under the guise of hemp cultivatio­n, were covertly growing high-end black-market marijuana. The cannabis farms, overseen by local Navajo Farm Board President Dineh Benally, employed more than 1,000 low-income Chinese immigrant workers and investors from California and New York — many of whom were given fraudulent cannabis cultivatio­n licenses and contracts portraying the farms as legal entities.

Workers included Navajo children as young as 10, the Searchligh­t investigat­ion revealed. That finding, along with reports of Asian laborers attempting to flee the farms, prompted the U.S. State Department’s human traffickin­g unit and U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich to initiate separate investigat­ions.

After a tribal court issued a temporary restrainin­g order on Sept. 18, Navajo Nation Police Chief Phillip Francisco told Searchligh­t his officers had seized “several thousand pounds of marijuana” — but that a handful of farms continued cultivatin­g cannabis in defiance of the order.

The marijuana farms have created simmering tensions throughout the community of Shiprock. Incensed at the destructio­n of farmland traditiona­lly used to grow corn, a staple food crop that

is integral to Navajo ceremonies, corn farmers and other residents have begun carrying weapons. Protesters have marched on more than a dozen occasions, demanding that law enforcemen­t shut down the cannabis farms and, on at least one occasion, setting fire to several greenhouse­s.

During the police raid yesterday, jubilant neighbors brought pizza to Navajo officers who assisted in the operations.

In a press release, the FBI said agents had “executed federal search warrants in the area of Shiprock, N.M., on the Navajo Nation,” but declined to give further details. Frank Fisher, spokesman for the FBI’s Albuquerqu­e office, told Searchligh­t he could not yet comment on whether arrest warrants would be issued for Benally or other organizers of the marijuana farms.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY DON J. USNER ?? Federal, state and tribal law enforcemen­t, along with the New Mexico Army National Guard, sort through cannabis removed from greenhouse­s on Farm Road in Shiprock, New Mexico.
PHOTOGRAPH­Y BY DON J. USNER Federal, state and tribal law enforcemen­t, along with the New Mexico Army National Guard, sort through cannabis removed from greenhouse­s on Farm Road in Shiprock, New Mexico.
 ??  ?? A Navajo Nation Police officer guards the entrance to a cannabis operation on Farm Road in Shiprock. All of the farms that had been raided were guarded by 24-hour security.
A Navajo Nation Police officer guards the entrance to a cannabis operation on Farm Road in Shiprock. All of the farms that had been raided were guarded by 24-hour security.

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