Thursday, April 18, 2024

Illicit Cannabis Farm So Huge, It Was Visible From Space

If the pot farm was big enough to see from Google Earth, why did it take authorities more than a year to raid the site?

By Maureen Meehan

Okay, we know that NASA’s international space station and other such spacecraft can pick up a heck of a lot of what’s happening here on the third planet from the sun, but an indoor cannabis farm?

Last week, authorities in Nevada, along with an impressive backup of national law enforcers, raided what they called the largest illegal marijuana grow in Douglas County history, and perhaps one of the largest ever to be discovered in the state, which legalized adult-use cannabis in 2017.

Emerald Triangle: Does The Best Weed In The World Really Grow There?
Photo by Olena Ruban/Getty Images

With 80 workers, the cannabis farm was also the largest employer in the area, rivaling several smaller firms in Douglas County, which is located some 20 miles south of Nevada’s state capital Carson City and borders Lake Tahoe.

RELATED: Why Enforcement Is Not The Best Way To Combat The Illicit Market

The numbers associated with the 160-greenhouse pot grow on 22 acres of land were “staggering,” reported the Record-Courier.

What Did Authorities Do With the 62 Tons of Weed When They Found It? 

They buried it on the site, “…hopefully deep enough to discourage anyone else from trying to dig it up,” according to the newspaper.

“These were not little plants either. People working on-site in rugged conditions that wouldn’t pass muster in any regulated business tended the plants for months. Residents first started reporting the site last summer (2020) even as the last embers of the Numbers Fire were growing cold.”

RELATED: Nevada Is Making So Much Money Off Legal Weed That Other States Want In

The Numbers Fire was a wildfire that burned nearly 19,000 acres in Nevada’s Pine Nut Mountains in July 2020 and damaged over 1,000 homes.

What Took Authorities So Long To Raid The Site?

The Record-Courier opined that law enforcement may have been waiting to uncover the source of funding in the hope of busting a sophisticated criminal enterprise and then tracking down the kingpins.

DEA
Photo by Eric Kayne/Stringer/Getty Images

Meanwhile, when the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, the DEA, Homeland Security  Investigations, Bureau of Indian Affairs, the FBI, the Washoe Tribal Police Department Nevada Division of Investigation and several other local law enforcers finally raided the cannabis greenhouses, they detained approximately 80 people for questioning, per the Sheriff’s webpage. But only two were arrested — one for an immigration violation and one for possession of a controlled substance that wasn’t marijuana.

It seems, for now at least, the authorities’ chances of tracking down the cannabis kingpins might have gotten buried with the 62 tons of weed.

This article originally appeared on Benzinga and has been reposted with permission.

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