The Borneo Post

Despite legalisati­on, California battles illegal marijuana farms

- Romain Fonsegrive­s

NEWBERRY SPRINGS, United States: “Sheriff’s Department! Search Warrant,” shout armed officers as they enter a property in the heart of the California­n desert, where they soon find hundreds of illegal cannabis plants.

Marijuana was fully legalised in the state in 2016 following a public vote, in a move that proponents said would bring an end to a huge black market and the crime and nuisance associated with it.

In reality, the sector has boomed, with illegal growers tempted by the promise of fat profits for operators who don’t have to worry about licenses, standards and even paying for their water.

“Right around 2016, when laws started to change, there was a huge increase of illegal cultivatio­ns,” Sergeant Chris Morsch told AFP during a recent raid.

“The model definitely was not perfect.”

Morsch and his colleagues from San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department carry out six to ten raids every week, dismantlin­g some of the hundreds of greenhouse­s that dot the Mojave Desert, east of Los Angeles.

The facilities allow growers to cultivate their crop year-round, with a lucrative harvest every few months.

“This could bring upwards of $600 per pound” (450 grams) in California once the flowers are processed, said Sergeant Chris Basse , noting that in states where recreation­al marijuana is illegal “you’re looking at triple the price.”

A few industrial-sized greenhouse­s can provide a revenue of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Crime

Illegal farms are found throughout California’s varied landscapes, from forests to fields to deserts.

The market share for their produce dwarfs that sold legally, a sector whose sales have

stagnated at around $5 billion a year.

“The explosion of the black market, I would say it has a lot to do with the taxation of marijuana in the state of California,” said Basse .

“Some of these permits to actually cultivate, manufactur­e, distribute... are upwards of $100,000, which makes it very difficult for someone to actually get into the legal market.”

With such handsome profits to be made, illegal cannabis growth o en intersects with more serious crime.

In January, six bullet-riddled bodies were found on a desert road in San Bernardino County, murders that investigat­ors said were linked to the se ling of scores among competing growers.

Yet there appears to be scant evidence of the involvemen­t of large-scale organized crime, said Basse , with many of those caught up being opportunis­tic criminals from Latin America, Asia or the United States.

“We have people who have been charged with marijuana crimes in the past, and then we have people who have no criminal background whatsoever,” he said.

These groups constantly play cat and mouse with the police – and they’re sometimes one step ahead.

All but one of the five plantation­s where an AFP team accompanie­d sheriff’s agents were empty, the producers having fled before the raid.

Only Clarance Joseph was surprised by the armed officers on his land in Newberry Springs, a hamlet off Route 66.

Joseph, an American, told AFP

he had been operating since 2017, thanks to an agreement with a group of Laotians: he let them cultivate greenhouse­s on his property and received 20 per cent of the profits.

Pesticides

“That is a big loss,” he sighed as the police hacked at the cannabis plants.

“That’s six months of work... I was just flying under the radar, not stepping on anybody’s toes.”

Joseph will likely be summoned to court where he could expect to be issued with a fine.

Since legalisati­on, the penalties for illegal cultivatio­n have been cut to a maximum $500 fine and six months in prison, although law enforcemen­t officers say jail time is very unusual.

“Unless we find ghost guns or environmen­tal crimes, they’re not risking much,” says Morsch.

“We’re filing reports of hundreds of pages, so seeing sanctions so low can be frustratin­g.”

Many farms are up and running again shortly a er a police raid, with some irrigating their crop with illegally tapped water hydrants or clandestin­e wells, heaping further pressure on drought-plagued California.

Police searches sometimes turn up harmful pesticides, including substances like carbofuran, a pesticide so toxic that small quantities can kill a large animal.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says ingestion, inhalation or skin absorption affects the central nervous system and can cause diarrhoea and convulsion­s. — AFP

 ?? ?? Basse inspects an illegal cannabis farm in Newberry Springs during a raid, in the western Mojave Desert of Southern California.
Basse inspects an illegal cannabis farm in Newberry Springs during a raid, in the western Mojave Desert of Southern California.

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