By Elliot Spagat And Michael R. Blood
Associated Press
September 8, 2020
AGUANGA, Calif. – An illegal marijuana growing operation where seven people were fatally shot in a small, rural Southern California town had the markings of organized crime, authorities said Tuesday.
More than 20 people
lived on the property, which had several makeshift dwellings, a nursery
and vehicles used in production, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco
said. Marijuana was processed to honey oil, a highly potent concentrate
made by extracting the high-inducing chemical THC from cannabis.
All
seven victims and witnesses were Laotian, Bianco said. Six people were
found dead on the property, and a woman who was shot there died later at
a hospital.
“This was not a small operation," Bianco said. “This is a very organized-crime type of an operation.”
Illegal
grows are common in and around Aguanga, a single stop-sign town of
about 2,000 people north of San Diego with horse ranches along dirt
roads. Still, the scale of the Labor Day massacre stunned residents and
showed how violence permeates California's illegal marijuana market.
The state broadly legalized recreational marijuana sales in
January 2018. But the illicit market is thriving — in part because hefty
legal marijuana taxes send consumers looking for better deals in the
illegal economy.
Before dawn Monday, Riverside County
sheriff's deputies responded to a 911 call of an assault with a deadly
weapon and shots fired at the Aguanga home.
Investigators seized more than 1,000 pounds (454 kilograms) of marijuana and several hundred marijuana plants.
Despite
there being no arrests or identified suspects, the sheriff's statement
called the deaths “an isolated incident” that did not threaten people in
Aguanga.
Partially eaten pizza sat in boxes in a
circular dirt driveway of the dilapidated two-bedroom house where the
shootings occurred. Three cars were parked outside — one with its front
doors open.
Cases of bottled water were stacked on the
front porch, which was strewn with clothing and plastic bags. A black
tarp was stretched atop poles in the fenced backyard, indicating a small
growing operation. Unlike many neighboring homes, it had neither a gate
nor a “no trespassing” sign at the entrance.
Reached by phone, property owner Ronald McKay expressed
surprise, saying he didn't know a shooting had taken place at either of
the rentals, a mobile home and the house.
He said he had
tried to visit Monday to check on the well during the recent heat wave,
but he was turned away by a deputy who wouldn’t tell him what was going
on. He said he left his phone number, but authorities never called.
McKay
said he didn’t know the tenants or their names — the rentals are
handled by someone who works with him. But he said the home had been
rented for three years and the mobile home for two without incident.
“I’m
kind of unaware of anything right now,” McKay said. “For two and three
years, they’ve been there — perfect. Never had an issue.”
Aguanga,
with its post office, general store and real estate brokerage, is in an
area dotted with vineyards and horse ranches that have given it some
traction as a weekend getaway for Southern California residents. It's
near Temecula, a bedroom community for San Diego and Los Angeles.
Deputies in February seized more than 9,900 plants and
collected 411 pounds (186 kilograms) of processed marijuana and firearms
from suspected illegal marijuana sites in the Aguanga area. Four people
were arrested.
Law enforcement surveillance in the area
has spawned nicknames like “Marijuana Mondays,” “Weed Wednesdays” and
“THC Thursdays,” said Mike Reed, a real estate broker and 28-year
Aguanga resident.
Reed said he does real-estate business with pot growers — some of whom live in his gated community.
Residents move to Aguanga for “peace and solitude," Reed said. “People live here because it’s not in the city.”
Aguanga's
isolation, however, may have made it prone to illegal marijuana sales
and cultivation. The sheriff said almost every marijuana operation in
the mountainous communities is illegal.
Adam Spiker,
executive director of the Southern California Coalition, a cannabis
industry group, said the shootings were a reminder that the sprawling
illegal marketplace remains largely unchecked.
“Shame on all of us: It seems we have one foot in and one foot out on regulating this industry,” Spiker said.
Many
California communities have not established legal marijuana markets or
have banned commercial marijuana activity. Law enforcement has been
unable to keep up with the illicit growing operations.
“This
risk is inherent in the underground market,” said Los Angeles marijuana
dispensary owner Jerred Kiloh, who heads United Cannabis Business
Association, an industry group. “When you have money and high returns,
people want to take that from you.”
Kiloh said most illicit market crimes go unreported because farmers who have been robbed cannot turn to authorities.
Laotian
involvement in illegal marijuana harvesting has grown over the last
decade in California’s agricultural heartland. People from the
relatively small community account for much of the pot growing in
backyards and on prime farmland.
Large cannabis growing operations typically have hundreds of
thousands of dollars of product at each site, making them attractive
targets for criminals.
"That’s why the violence becomes worse and worse,” Kiloh said.
__________
__________
MORE FAKE NEWS
by Bob Walsh
Various
media outlets are reporting seven murders just outside of the one-stop
sign town of Aguanga, CA. These alleged murders took place on Monday in
conjunction with an illegal marijuana grow. All of the alleged dead
people and all of the alleged witnesses are Laotian. The Riverside
County S O is asserting that there was about 1,000 pounds of processed
marijauna and a buttload of plants.
Since
as everybody knows drugs are an essentially victimless crime and murder
victims are without question victims this is clearly fake news. The
dead bodies were probably dummies, or were taken away from ICE detention
facilities in order to conceal deaths of illegal aliens, or some such
bullshit.
No comments:
Post a Comment