cannabisnews.com: State Turns To Helicopters and Hot Lines 





State Turns To Helicopters and Hot Lines 
Posted by FoM on October 08, 2000 at 07:50:02 PT
By James McGinnis, The Associated Press
Source: Bergen Record
Crime may not pay, but sometimes spotting it does. Since 1992, the hot line and New Jersey's Cannabis Eradication and Suppression Program together have led to the arrests of 3,356 people in the state, said John Hagerty, a spokesman for the New Jersey State Police.The program got a big boost in 1998, when the state police were given two Air National Guard helicopters, equipped to locate hidden marijuana fields, as part of the U.S. Justice Department's Cannabis Eradication and Suppression Program.
The hot line, helicopters, and funding to operate them are part of a joint partnership between the State police and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration to attack the cultivation of marijuana, Hagerty said.Under the program, the state police have confiscated 30,599 marijuana plants, valued at $3.1 million, Hagerty said.Getting the word out about the hot line meant advertising in newspapers in New Jersey, Hagerty said. Billboards were erected and the state police contracted with NJ Transit to get reward information to commuters.Meanwhile, the DEA has been training state troopers since 1992 on how to detect marijuana, as well as acting in an advisory capacity to direct the state's efforts.The DEA spends $13 million a year to support the 96 state and local agencies that have taken part in the program. This year, New Jersey State Police received a $280,000 grant as part of the program, according to Hagerty.He would not discuss specific techniques used by helicopter pilots and state police. In the past, the DEA has used thermal imaging to identify indoor marijuana growers by detecting the heat from lighting used to grow the plants."The entire state is being covered," Hagerty said.Deborah Jacobs, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey, criticized the program's tactics, as well as the hot line."We think it's an unhealthy practice in a society to encourage citizens to turn on one another," Jacobs said. "To provide financial incentive in circumstances where citizens are living in poverty, where people will be greatly pressured to find financial security, is irresponsible."We have lost a huge number of civil liberties in the name of the war on drugs, the most fundamental being the right of privacy."The ACLU, which supports the legalization of marijuana, does not have any cases pending that might challenge the use of the hot line by state police, however.New Jersey's efforts to stamp out homegrown marijuana includes a 24-hour Marijuana Eradication Hot Line offering tipsters a bounty of up to $500. Anyone who spots marijuana plants, growing indoors or outdoors, can earn the reward by calling the hot line at (888) 798-WEED.Source: Bergen Record (NJ)Published: Sunday, October 8, 2000Copyright © 2000 Bergen Record Corp.Contact: LettersToTheEditor bergen.comWebsite: http://www.bergen.com/Feedback: http://www.bergen.com/cgi-bin/feedback Related Articles & Web Site:A.C.L.U.http://www.aclu.org/ San Bernardino Pot Bust Linked To County http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread7036.shtml Raid Yields Plantshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread7015.shtmlWeeding Out Pot Farms From Aloft http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread6950.shtml200 Million in Pot Seized in Huge Kern Bust http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread6888.shtml 
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