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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Pot Busts In Forests Strain Chelan County
Title:US WA: Pot Busts In Forests Strain Chelan County
Published On:2005-11-20
Source:Spokesman-Review (WA)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 07:59:20
POT BUSTS IN FORESTS STRAIN CHELAN COUNTY

Sheriff Says Forest Service Should Pay More Toward Costs Of Shutting
Down Operations On Federal Land

The number of marijuana fields found in Chelan and Okanogan counties
this year exceeds that found in the rest of the national forests in
Washington and Oregon combined.

WENATCHEE - Chelan County sheriff's officials want more money from
the U.S. Forest Service to pay for increasing marijuana busts that
deputies have investigated on national forest lands.

Sheriff Mike Harum said he asked the Forest Service for $48,000 in
overtime and other costs incurred by his office after eight pot
fields were found on forest lands this year.

The number of marijuana operations found on federal lands is expected
to increase in coming years, Harum said, and the agency should help.

But that's not likely, Forest Service officials say.

"That's an unrealistic expectation," said Ron Pugh, who supervises
criminal investigations for the Forest Service in Washington and
Oregon. "We're struggling for funds just like he (Harum) is."

The number of fields found in Chelan and Okanogan counties this year
exceeds that found in the rest of the national forests in Washington
and Oregon combined, Pugh said. But drug-related crimes are
overshadowed by concerns for public safety, wildfire investigations
and the theft of resources.

Although the agency has agreed to pay $7,200 for helicopter
surveillance done by Chelan County this year, even that amount may
not be possible next year, Pugh said.

"We don't have any more funding," he said, noting that the agency's
other regions around the West are also experiencing a boom in
marijuana growing. Officials are trying to address the problem with
limited funding.

The Forest Service is adding an officer to the Columbia River Drug
Task Force, and the agency's law enforcement officers received more
formal training this year on investigating marijuana fields. It may
also move a detective from Oregon to Wenatchee, Pugh said.

Still, Chelan County wants more help paying for its overtime,
surveillance and other costs for investigations on federal lands, and
county commissioners have asked Republican Rep. Doc Hastings to get
more funding from the agency.

The county has spent $130,000 so far this year investigating 11
marijuana fields. Nine people have been arrested, with more expected,
said Harum, who met with local and regional forest officials in
August to ask for more money.

"We really feel like the Forest Service should reimburse the county
for part of that," Commissioner Buell Hawkins said.
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