Officials work to dismantle a marijuana operation in Wayne County. About 20,000 plants were destroyed.
Provided by Wayne County Sheriff
The dismantling of a large marijuana operation in Wayne County Friday is the second of its kind in as many days and drug enforcement officials are preparing for the harvest season.
Around 20,000 marijuana plants — with a street value of between $25 million and $60 million — were found on the north slope of Boulder Mountain earlier this week, said Wayne County sheriff's information officer Tal Ehlers. The plants weighed in at about 15,000 pounds.
The growing area was discovered in part by a neighborhood watch group and when police arrived at the scene, they were able to take one person into custody. Ehlers said investigators are continuing to conduct surveillance in the area because they believe there are about "half a dozen" others still at-large.
He said the effort to dismantle the pot farm was "put together quickly" and various groups, including the Drug Enforcement Administration, Central Utah Narcotics Task Force and U.S. Forest Service, were able to complete the task of removing and destroying the plants in two days.
Drug enforcement officers in Tooele discovered similar farms Thursday in Ophir Canyon, removing an amount of marijuana worth $9 million, police said. When officers moved in on that farm, there was a man at the site, but he escaped from officials, prompting a mountain search, police said.
Michael Root, supervisory special agent with the DEA, said discoveries of marijuana farms are not uncommon this time of year.
"This is the time of year that they usually harvest," Root said. "They're found in a variety of ways, but the most likely is early season bull hunters. You get a lot of bull hunters, hikers, campers. I think we'll be busy here for the next three or four weeks."
Root said these farms are often discovered accidentally by outdoorsmen, but drug enforcement officials also utilize the help of informants, and they check on growth sites from previous years. Root said the amount of marijuana growing in Utah has increased significantly in the past few years.
"Last year we had a growth in St. George of 40,000 plants," Root said. "For our fiscal year last year of October to October, we had more than 100,000 plants in Utah, which is a record. It's almost 90,000 more than a few years ago."
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