cannabisnews.com: On The Trail of Missing Marijuana 





On The Trail of Missing Marijuana 
Posted by FoM on February 12, 2002 at 12:25:47 PT
By Barry Saunders
Source: News & Observer 
Good morning, and welcome to America's highest -- not highest-rated, just highest -- TV game show: "Whose Dope Is It Anyway?"That's not really a TV show, but it is one of the questions the feds and Chatham County residents have been trying to answer since 5,000 pounds of marijuana went "POOF" in 2000. They want to know not only to whom the confiscated weed belonged, but also where it went. 
You might recall that some of it disappeared from a truck behind the sheriff's office and a ton -- yes, a ton -- of it was removed from the landfill where sheriff's deputies are said to have buried it allegedly so drug dealers couldn't get their filthy hands on it.Don't look so skeptical. It makes perfect sense -- or it would after a few tokes of some really good stuff -- to bury 2,000 pounds of dope (approximate street value, $2 million) 4 feet deep in an unguarded county landfill. "There, that'll keep it away from our kids, and no one will ever think to look in here," they probably said while tossing the last shovelful of dirt onto it.Chatham County residents, after learning of such highly sophisticated drug interdiction efforts, must be wondering, "Who's in charge here: Cheech and Chong?"The dope missing from the truck and the landfill has already influenced the political landscape in Chatham County: When Sheriff Ike Gray announced that he was running for election to the office -- he was appointed in December 2000 to succeed an ailing Donald Whitt -- he was accompanied, not in time-tested political fashion by his adoring wife, kids and dog, but by his attorney. The attorney was there to answer questions about the missing pot and about a lawsuit filed by a former deputy.Gray was chief deputy when the drugs disappeared, and he is being sued by Dan Phillips, who said he was fired by Gray for -- among other things -- blowing the whistle about the missing pot. Proving that he can follow orders, Gray refused to answer any questions about how the ganja got gone. His only response on the subject was, "The FBI is still doing an ongoing investigation. They anticipate some closure in the near future."Gray is being challenged by county Commissioner Rick Givens and is apparently hoping Chatham County voters have short memories, will forget about the cannabis reported missing on his watch and keep him in office.Givens could face an uphill battle, especially if Gray tells voters, "I've already shown I can make dope -- er, I mean the dope problem -- disappear."After all this time, the trail has definitely grown cold, and the smoke has cleared. No one but an expert criminologist would know what to look for in tracking down the purloined pot. That's why I drove down yesterday to lend my expertise to solving this caper.Since my trained nose couldn't pick up the pungent scent I sought, I decided to follow the only promising lead I found -- a trail of empty Doritos bags, Snickers wrappers and Ho-Ho packs: I figured that whoever stole 5,000 pounds of pot must've had an awesome case of the munchies afterwards.Alas, the trail of litter led me to where the pot -- and the litter -- should've been: the county landfill. Source: News & Observer (NC)Author: Barry SaundersPublished: Tuesday, February 12, 2002 Copyright: 2002 The News and Observer Publishing CompanyContact: forum nando.comWebsite: http://www.news-observer.com/Related Articles:Marijuana Mishap Mars Credibility http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10094.shtmlFBI Offers Reward for Missing Marijuana http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread10037.shtml
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