From Deseret News archives:
'Spot Pot, Get A Lot' program gives tipsters $$
Hopes are extra incentive will aid in drug fight
Local law enforcement agencies are embarking on a new marijuana eradication campaign called the "Spot Pot, Get A Lot" program, it was announced this week by Maj. Rich Townsend, chief of the state Bureau of Investigation.
Hikers, hunters, 4-wheelers and other outdoor enthusiasts have been successful in spotting entire groves of the illegal plants in Wasatch Front canyons. Thousands of plants worth millions of dollars have only been found with help from citizens, Townsend said.
"When you pluck up 9,000 plants in the canyons, it leads you to believe there's more than we're aware of," he said.
The "Spot Pot, Get A Lot" campaign introduces a new technique in fighting marijuana growers: a toll-free hotline at 1-888-POT-FOUND. Tips leading to large growth finds may yield as much as a $1,000 reward.
"We haven't been successful looking for marijuana growths; citizens have been the most successful," he said. "We wanted to reward them and give additional incentive."
Law enforcement has trouble finding large growths in the mountains because they're too hard to see from the air. They're planted so they blend in with the foliage.
"It's our feeling, and it's backed up by the crime we deal with, that marijuana is a gateway drug to harder and more dangerous drugs. And the effect on driving is dangerous," he said. "People shouldn't be allowed to smoke it."
Tips to the hotline will be passed on to city police or county sheriffs by the bureau wherever the suspected growing is taking place. In this way, the bureau is functioning more as a channel to facilitate local law enforcement.
Because Utah's growing season is relatively short, indoor marijuana growing is on the rise, Townsend said. While county sheriffs will usually be called out to investigate large growths in the mountains, operations growing more than would be needed for personal use in a basement or garage will be viewed similarly with the wilderness endeavors with thousands of plants, he said.
E-mail: akirk@desnews.com
Comments
- Dixie campus briefs 1:10 a.m.
- Westminster campus briefs 1:09 a.m.
- UVU campus briefs 1:07 a.m.
- Utah Utes campus briefs 1:07 a.m.
- Visit to paradise nightmarish for Ags 12:32 a.m.
- Utes struggling to shake starts 12:31 a.m.
- Cougars' execution flawless 12:30 a.m.
- Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings 12:17 a.m.
- 3A football: Tigers pull away 12:12 a.m.
- Editorial: 'Immigrant' children needy 12:12 a.m.
- Gay advocates trek to LDS office
207 - Dirk does dirty work in Dallas
190 - Lobo suspended
171 - Speed has never been BYU's game
136 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
128 - House passes health care bill
111 - RSL rallies to advance
102 - Prep football: San Juan vs. S. Sevier
102 - Thousands protest health bill
100 - Provo company innovating engines
98
Why do so many people live so close to refineries in Utah and elsewhere?
NASA's Stardust probe continues to bring new knowledge about the nature...
Nothing proposed would keep young adults from learning of the reality of sex,...
the only "decent" team we played we lost to? I guess that Air Force isn't a...
I am watching the game again, and it is awesome!!!
I can't help but laugh inside when I read comments from YBU/TCU fans who...
(from the independant) I like Dennis Miller.... and Bill Maher, although I...
As a BYU alumnus, I can't justify to myself ever donating another dollar to...
Not a chance. Don't get me wrong they are both studs, but if Asiata wasn't...
Titan Fan, sorry that some of your best players got hurt. I hope they...
So sad how fear based so many are.
Will the Jazz even make the playoffs this year. The way they are playing it...


You can be the first to comment on this story.