Madera County Drug Agents Eradicate Thousands of Pot Plants

By PRESS RELEASE

Credit: Madera County Sheriff's Office

Madera County Drug Agents Eradicate Thousands of Pot Plants

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July 18, 2012 Updated Jul 18, 2012 at 1:19 PM PDT

Drug Agents are turning up the heat as “Operation Mercury” kicks into high gear.

In what is being touted as a one-two punch against Drug Trafficking Organizations, MADNET (Madera County Narcotic Enforcement Team), along with 32 agents, completed a 24-hour marathon to not only eradicate more than twenty thousand marijuana plants, they successfully completed the first ever reclamation operation during their mission.

Agents with MADNET, Bureau of Land Management (BLM), US Forest Service, Fish & Game, Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP), and 16 sworn Peace Officers with Madera county’s SWAT Team took part in the 24-hour operation on Monday and Tuesday.

Unlike years past, when authorities handled eradication missions and reclamation operations in two stages, Madera County embraced the challenge to do it all at once.

Generally, agents eradicate the gardens mid-summer through early fall, and leave the campsites intact for volunteers with BLM to hike in mid-October to remove the debris.

“Finding these grow sites and moving in has traditionally been a gamble,” says Sheriff John Anderson. “If we eradicate too quickly, we leave drug traffickers time to replant. If we move in too late, we run the risk that they’ve harvested their crop.”

This year, with help from the Bureau of Land Management, agents from MADNET, Fish & Game, US Forest Service, CAMP and the county’s SWAT Team, Madera County was able to tackle both … hence, the ‘one-two-punch.’

“As a result of their efforts,” says Sheriff Anderson (who took part in the eradication operation) “they successfully dismantled the entire illicit operation for 2012.”

The plants seized from each of the gardens were anywhere from 2 feet to 4 and 5 feet tall. Had they been able to mature, they more than likely would have been ready for harvest sometime around mid-August.

“By destroying the campsites, Madera County has killed any chance of growers reseeding this season.”

Sheriff Anderson says while this year’s cash crop for Drug Traffickers has been stunned, he says it is important for the public to realize that they [Drug Traffickers] will return. “And next year we’ll be back, and we plan to launch the same attack.”

During the operation, agents pulled enough drip lines to stretch more than 3 miles. The grow sites were elaborate and sophisticated operations -- some equipped with timers.

Agents seized propane tanks, stockpiled food purchased in bulk and still in their packaging, bags of fertilizer, clothing, bedding, tools, and trash.

No arrests made during the 24-hour operation.

Grow sites reclaimed during Madera County’s Operation Mercury Mission include: Saginaw Creek, Chiquito Creek West, Carter Creek, Corlieu Falls near Lewis Creek, and Cheapo Saddle -- not far from Bass Lake.

The terrain in these remote locations was so dense and steep, the only way agents could carry out their operation was to STABO (Stabilized Tactical Airborne Body Operations) in.

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