Cannabis News DrugSense
  Big Island Cutting Helicopter Marijuana Raids
Posted by FoM on July 12, 2001 at 11:23:31 PT
By Hugh Clark, Advertiser Big Island Bureau 
Source: Honolulu Advertiser 

cannabis In the mid-1980s, East Hawai'i was regarded as the marijuana capital of the nation after police destroyed more than 1 million plants in an unceasing series of helicopter raids. Retired vice squad commander Richard "Dickie" Carter remembers when the haul was 200,000 plants in a single day.

"We were hot," Carter said yesterday, recalling Operation Green Harvest aimed at bringing down the illegal industry, which was propping up Puna's economy. The crackdown resulted in a decline in retail sales and school enrollment in the area.

Today, with new restrictions on helicopter raids imposed by the Hawai'i County Council, Big Island police are netting only a fraction of past marijuana harvests. In the first five months of the year, only 10,445 plants were destroyed.

Last year, 106,639 plants were seized by police.

Carter, who retired in 1999, said the situation today "is a farce. They (the council members) are just looking for trouble."

Facing impeachment threats by marijuana legalization advocates, the council late last year rejected federal drug enforcement grants to pay for police overtime and helicopter support.

In February, the council decided to accept the grants on the condition that police follow stricter rules that included keeping helicopters at least 1,000 feet away from homes in rural subdivisions and the recognition of licensed users of medical marijuana.

Police have scheduled two related hearings Aug. 3 on new administrative rules governing conduct during marijuana raids and in dealing with medical marijuana users. The rules eventually are to be published with the county clerk.

All of this is required to make subsequent federal grants possible.

Lt. Henry Tavares, East Hawai'i vice commander for the past five years, said the new rules mean less efficient use of federal grant money to search for marijuana and destroy the illegal plants. The result of the buffer zone around homes in rural subdivisions, he said, is that these areas are now largely ignored.

Even though the frequency of helicopter flights has declined, the number of complaints by Puna residents about the choppers has remained level, Tavares said.

Many of the Puna subdivisions, such as Fern Forest and Hawaiian Acres, have large signs urging those concerned about the helicopter searches to call in complaints.

Last week, Hank Roberts of Puna and Roger Christie of Hilo urged the council to ban all helicopter raids because they violate citizens' rights.

The Aug. 3 hearing that begins at 9 a.m. in the Hawai'i County Council Room in Hilo also will take up rules for protecting medical marijuana users.

Hawai'i is one of eight states that allows marijuana to be used for medical purposes. State officials said 78 patients on the Big Island had been issued permits compared with 54 on Kaua'i, 49 on O'ahu and 16 on Maui.

A U.S. Supreme Court decision in May appeared to have invalidated the state law passed last year, but Gov. Ben Cayetano has said the ruling would not affect legal use of the substance in Hawai'i for those holding medical prescriptions.

The High Court had ruled that marijuana does not have proven medical benefits and affirmed that manufacturing and distributing marijuana is illegal throughout the United States.

The Big Island draft rules for police are available from the Police Department or the office of Councilman Gary Safarik of Puna.

Source: Honolulu Advertiser (HI)
Author: Hugh Clark, Advertiser Big Island Bureau
Published: Thursday, July 12, 2001
Copyright: 2001 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
Contact: letters@honoluluadvertiser.com
Website: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/

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http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10129.shtml


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Comment #2 posted by observer on July 12, 2001 at 13:50:48 PT
Federal Grant, Corrupt Local Police
or you could simply re-legalize personal responsibility, in which case the amount of federal grant money you would need would be around $0.00.

What? But, but, what about the salaries of the government officials and authorities, and police, and prosecutors?

[...]will be based in Greensboro and start in early 2002, project coordinator Wheaton Pike said. The grant money will last three years. Guilford will contribute the equivalent of $201,446 in manpower [...] ( US NC: Guilford Lands U.S. Funding For Drug Court, Mike Fuchs, Staff Writer, Sat, 9 Jul 2001, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1227/a08.html )

City police officers once again will be based in College Hill Courts to protect federal grant money aimed at ending crime, drugs and gangs, officials said this week. "The program [...] ( US TN: Police Back At College Hill Courts, Kathy Gilbert, Thu, 12 Jul 2001, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1256/a09.html )

The approximately $80,000 grant instructs the task force to arrest 45 individuals for felony drug violations, conduct 25 contro[...] ( US IA: Citizens Decry I.C. Police Tactics, Megan L. Eckhardt, Wed, 21 Feb 2001, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n317/a04.html )

The U.S. Justice Department has awarded a $175,000 grant to Pine Bluff to help "weed out" crime, drug use and gang activity in high-crime neighborhoods,[...] ( US AR: Pine Bluff Is Granted $175,000 To Fight, , Wed, 14 Mar 2001, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n452/a09.html )

Funded by a $722,126 federal grant, the Youth Crime Watch is part of a national program to reduce violence, crime and drug abuse [...] ( US GA: School Police Enlist Aid Of Students In New Crime Watch, Ahan Kim, Thu, 05 Jul 2001, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1198/a06.html )

etc.


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Comment #1 posted by jorma nash on July 12, 2001 at 13:20:48 PT
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

another article that tries really hard to suggest
the rapid crumbling of prohibition is the end of
civilization,
but the utter futility of playing conciousness police
seems to peek through the cracks, to me.

>Carter, who retired in 1999, said the situation today "is a >farce. They (the council members) are just looking for >trouble."

awwww, being a jackbooted thug isn't nearly as fun as it used to be.

>All of this is required to make subsequent federal grants possible.

or you could simply re-legalize personal responsibility,
in which case the amount of federal grant money you
would need would be around $0.00.

>Even though the frequency of helicopter flights has
>declined, the number of complaints by Puna residents about
>the choppers has remained level, Tavares said.

how rude of the american people
to not be thankful
for being considered criminals
until proven innocent,
for their own good.

>A U.S. Supreme Court decision in May appeared to have >invalidated the state law passed last year

if you haven't done one iota of fact finding about
the scope of that case...

but i suppose i expect too much, after all, he's only a reporter.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

and by the way: the Honolulu Advertiser?

now, Noam Chomsky recently taught me that


"Media service to the corporate sector is reflexive: the media are major corporations. Like others, they sell a product to a market: the product is audiences and the market is other businesses (advertisers). It would be surprising indeed if the choice and shaping of media content did not reflect the interests and preferences of the sellers and buyers, and the business world generally."
http://projectcensored.org/c2001stories/intro.html

but i didn't expect a newspaper to actually admit it
in its name.


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