Illegal Pot Invades California’s Deserts, Bringing Violence, Fear, Ecological Destruction
LAPPL News Watch
July 13, 2021
Before
his corpse was dumped in a shallow grave 50 miles north of Los Angeles,
Mauricio Ismael Gonzalez-Ramirez was held prisoner at one of the
hundreds of black-market pot farms that have exploded across
California’s high desert in the last several years, authorities say. He
worked in what has become California’s newest illegal marijuana haven:
the Mojave Desert.
A world away from the lush forest groves of the
“Emerald Triangle” of Northern California, this hot, dry, unforgiving
climate has attracted more than a thousand marijuana plantations that
fill the arid expanse between the Antelope Valley and the Colorado
River.
It’s an unprecedented siege that has upended life in the remote
desert communities and vast tract developments that overlook Joshua
trees and scrub.
Authorities say the boom has led to forced labor,
violence, water theft and the destruction of fragile desert habitat and
wildlife.
Longtime residents say they feel less safe, claiming
black-market growers act with impunity by carrying weapons, trading
gunfire with rivals and threatening those who wander too close to their
farms.
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