By John W. Whitehead
“They came again this morning at about 8:00
o’clock. A large cargo-type helicopter flew low
over the cabin, shaking it on its very
foundations. It shook all of us inside, too. I
feel frightened … I see how helpless and
tormented I am becoming with disgust and
disillusionment with the government which has
turned this beautiful country into a police
state …
I feel like I am in the middle of a war zone.”—Journal
entry from a California resident describing the
government’s aerial searches for marijuana
plants
August 25, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Backyard gardeners,
beware: tomato plants have become collateral damage
in the government’s war on drugs, especially
marijuana.
In fact, merely growing a vegetable garden on
your own property, or in a greenhouse on your
property, or
shopping at a gardening store for gardening
supplies—incredibly enough—could set you up for a
drug raid sanctioned by the courts.
It’s happened before.
After shopping for hydroponic tomatoes at their
local gardening store, a Kansas family found
themselves subjected to a SWAT team raid as part of
a multi-state, annual campaign dubbed “Operation
Constant Gardener,” in which
police collected the license plates of hundreds of
customers at the gardening store and then
investigated them for possible marijuana possession.
By “investigated,” I mean that police searched
through the family’s trash. (You can thank the
Supreme Court and their
1978 ruling in California v. Greenwood
for allowing police to invade your trash can.)
Finding “wet
glob vegetation” in the garbage, the cops
somehow managed to convince themselves—and a
judge—that it was marijuana.
In fact, it was loose-leaf tea, but those pesky
details don’t usually bother the cops when they’re
conducting field tests.
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Indeed, field tests routinely read positive for illegal drugs even when no drugs are present. According to investigative journalist Radley Balko, “it’s almost as if these tests come up positive whenever the police need them to. A partial list of substances that the tests have mistaken for illegal drugs would include sage, chocolate chip cookies, motor oil, spearmint, soap, tortilla dough, deodorant, billiard’s chalk, patchouli, flour, eucalyptus, breath mints, Jolly Ranchers and vitamins.”
There’s a long list of innocent ingredients that
could be mistaken for drugs and get you subjected to
a raid, because that’s all it takes—just the barest
whiff of a suspicion by police that you might be
engaged in criminal activity—to start the ball
rolling.
From there, these so-called “investigations”
follow
the usual script: judge issues a warrant for a
SWAT raid based on botched data, cops raid the home
and terrorize the family at gunpoint, cops find no
drugs, family sues over a violation of their Fourth
Amendment rights, and then the courts protect the
cops and their botched raid on the basis of
qualified immunity.
It happens all the time.
As Balko reports, “Police have broken down doors,
screamed obscenities, and
held innocent people at gunpoint only to discover
that what they thought were marijuana plants were
really sunflowers, hibiscus, ragweed, tomatoes,
or elderberry bushes. (It's happened with all
five.)”
Surely, you might think, the government has
enough on its hands right now—policing a novel
coronavirus pandemic, instituting nationwide
lockdowns, quelling civil unrests over police
brutality—that it doesn’t need to waste time and
resources ferreting out pot farmers.
You’d be wrong.
This is a government that excels at make-work
projects in which it assigns at-times unnecessary
jobs to government agents to keep them busy or
employed.
In this case, however, the make-work principle
(translation: making work to keep the police state
busy at taxpayer expense) is being used to justify
sending police and expensive military helicopters
likely equipped with sophisticated surveillance and
thermal imaging devices on
exploratory sorties every summer—again at
taxpayer expense—in order to uncover illegal
marijuana growing operations.
Often, however, what these air and ground
searches end up targeting are backyard gardeners
growing tomato plants.
Just recently, in fact, eyewitnesses in Virginia
reported low-flying black helicopters buzzing over
rural and suburban neighborhoods as part of a
multi-agency operation to search for marijuana
growers. Oftentimes these
joint operations involve local police, state police
and the Army National Guard.
One woman reported having her “tomato
plants complimented by the 7 cops that pulled up in
my yard in unmarked SUVs, after a helicopter hovered
over our house for 20 minutes this morning.”
Another man reported a similar experience from a few
years ago when police “showed up in
unmarked SUV's with guns pulled. Then the cops
on the ground argued with the helicopter because the
heat signature in the ‘copter didn’t match what was
growing.”
Back in 2013, an aerial surveillance mission
spotted what police thought might be marijuana
plants. Two days later, dozens of city officials,
SWAT team, police officers and code compliance
employees, and numerous official vehicles including
dozens of police cars and several specialized
vehicular equipment, including helicopters and
unmanned flying drones, descended on The Garden of
Eden, a 3.5-acre farm in Arlington, Texas, for a
10-hour raid in search of marijuana that turned
up nothing more than tomato, blackberry and okra
plants.
These aerial and ground sweeps have become
regular occurrences across the country, part of the
government’s multi-million dollar Domestic Cannabis
Eradication Program. Local cops refer to the annual
military maneuvers as “Eradication Day.”
Started in 1979 as a way to
fund local efforts to crack down on marijuana
growers in California and Hawaii, the
Eradication Program
went national in 1985, right around the time the
Reagan Administration
enabled the armed forces to get more involved in the
domestic “war on drugs.”
Writing for The Washington Post, Radley
Balko describes how these raids started off, with
the National Guard, spy planes and helicopters:
The project was called the Campaign Against
Marijuana Production, or CAMP… In all, thirteen
California counties were invaded by choppers,
some of them blaring Wagner’s “Ride of the
Valkyries” as they dropped Guardsmen and law
enforcement officers armed with automatic
weapons, sandviks, and machetes into the fields
of California … In CAMP’s first year, the
program conducted 524 raids, arrested 128
people, and seized about 65,000 marijuana
plants. Operating costs ran at a little over
$1.5 million. The next year, 24 more sheriffs
signed up for the program, for a total of 37.
CAMP conducted 398 raids, seized nearly 160,000
plants, and made 218 arrests at a cost to
taxpayers of $2.3 million.
The area’s larger growers had been put out of
business (or, probably more accurately, had set
up shop somewhere else), so by the start of the
second campaign in 1984, CAMP officials were
already targeting increasingly smaller growers.
By the end of that 1984 campaign, the
helicopters had to fly at lower and lower
altitudes to spot smaller batches of plants. The
noise, wind, and vibration from the choppers
could knock out windows, kick up dust clouds,
and scare livestock. The officials running the
operation made no bones about the paramilitary
tactics they were using.
They considered the areas they were raiding to
be war zones. In the interest of “officer
safety,” they gave themselves permission to
search any structures relatively close to a
marijuana supply, without a warrant. Anyone
coming anywhere near a raid operation was
subject to detainment, usually at gunpoint.
Right around the same time, in the mid-1980s, the
federal government started handing out grants to
local police departments to assist with their local
boots-on-the-ground “war on drugs.” These grants (through
the Byrne Grant program and COPS program, both of
which started to be phased out under George W. Bush,
only to be re-upped by Barack Obama) could be
used to pay for additional police personnel,
equipment, training, technical assistance and
information systems. However, studies show that
while these federal grants
did not improve police effectiveness or drug
deterrence, they did incentivize SWAT team
raids.
But how do you go from a “war on drugs” to
SWAT-style raids on vegetable gardens?
Connect the dots, starting with the government’s
war on marijuana, the emergence of SWAT teams, the
militarization of local police forces through the
federal 1033 Program, which allows the Pentagon to
transfer “vast
amounts of military equipment—machine guns and
ammunition, helicopters, night-vision gear, armored
cars—to local police departments,” and the
transformation of American communities into
battlefields: as always, it comes back to the make
work principle, which starts with local police
finding ways to justify the use of military
equipment and federal funding.
Each year, the
government spends between $14 and $18 million
funding helicopter sweeps and police overtime to
help the states track down illegal marijuana plants.
These sweeps are even being
carried out in states where it’s now legal to
grow marijuana.
The sweeps work like this: Local police, working
with multiple state agencies including the National
Guard, carry out ground and air searches of
different sectors.
Air spotters flying overhead in helicopters relay
their findings to police on the ground, who then
carry out a search-and-destroy mission.
Mark my words: the use of police drones will make
these kinds of aerial missions even more common.
For the most part, aerial surveillance is legal.
As Arthur Holland Michel writes for The Atlantic:
“When it comes to law enforcement,
police are likewise free to use aerial surveillance
without a warrant or special permission. Under
current privacy law, these operations are just as
legal as policing practices whereby an officer spots
unlawful activity while walking or driving through a
neighborhood.”
There have been a few notable exceptions.
In 2015, the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled that
surveillance from a low-flying helicopter conducting
an aerial search for marijuana by state police and
the national guard was illegal under the U.S.
Constitution. The court reasoned that “when
low-flying aerial activity leads to more than just
observation and actually causes an unreasonable
intrusion on the ground—most commonly from an
unreasonable amount of wind, dust, broken objects,
noise, and sheer panic—then at some point courts are
c and require a warrant before law enforcement
engages in such activity. The Fourth Amendment and
its prohibition against unreasonable searches and
seizures demands no less.”
In Philip Cobbs’ case, helicopter spotters
claimed to have seen two lone marijuana plants
growing in the wreckage of a fallen oak tree on the
Virginia native’s 39-acre family farm.
Cobbs noticed the black helicopter circling
overhead while spraying the blueberry bushes near
his house. After watching the helicopter for several
moments, Cobbs went inside to check on his blind,
deaf 90-year-old mother. By the time he returned
outside,
several unmarked police SUVs had driven onto his
property, and police (ten in all) in flak jackets,
carrying semi-automatic weapons and shouting
unintelligibly, had exited the vehicles and were
moving toward him.
Of course, it was never about the two pot plants.
What the cops were really after was
an excuse to search Cobbs’ little greenhouse,
which he had used that spring to start tomato
plants, cantaloupes, and watermelons, as well as
asters and hollyhocks, which he planned to sell at a
roadside stand near his home. The search of the
greenhouse turned up nothing more than used tomato
seedling containers.
Nevertheless, police charged Cobbs with
misdemeanor possession of marijuana for the two
plants they claimed to have found. Eventually, the
charges were dismissed but not before
The Rutherford Institute took up Cobbs’ case,
which revealed that police hadn’t even bothered to
secure a warrant before embarking on their raid of
Cobbs’ property—a raid that had to cost taxpayers
upwards of $25,000, at the very least—part of their
routine sweep of the countryside in search of
pot-growing operations.
Two plants or two hundred or no plants at all: it
doesn’t matter.
A SWAT team targeted one South Carolina man for
selling $50 worth of pot on two different occasions.
The Washington Post
reports: The SWAT team “broke down Betton’s door
with a battering ram, then fired at least 57 bullets
at him, hitting him nine times. He lost portions of
his gallbladder, colon, bowel and rectum, and is
paralyzed from the waist down. He also suffered
damage to his liver, lung, small intestine and
pancreas. Two of his vertebrae were damaged, and
another was partially destroyed. Another bullet
shattered his leg.” After security footage showed
that most of what police said about the raid was a
lie, the cops
settled the case for $2.75 million.
Monetary awards like that are the exception,
however.
Most of the time, the cops get away with murder
and mayhem. Literally.
Bottom line: no amount of marijuana is too
insignificant if it allows police to qualify for
federal grants and equipment and lay claim to seized
assets (there’s
the profit motive) under the guise of fighting
the War on Drugs.
SWAT teams carry out
more than 80,000 no-knock raids every year. The
vast majority of these raids are to serve
routine drug warrants, many times for crimes no
more serious than possession of marijuana.
Although growing numbers of states continue to
decriminalize marijuana use and
9 out of 10 Americans favor the legalization of
either medical or recreational/adult-use marijuana,
the government’s profit-driven “War on Drugs”—waged
with state and local police officers dressed in SWAT
gear, armed to the hilt, and trained to act like
soldiers on a battlefield, all thanks to funding
provided by the U.S. government, particularly the
Pentagon and Department of Homeland Security
(DHS)—has not abated.
Since the formation of the DHS post-9/11,
hundreds of billions of dollars in grants have
flowed to local police departments for SWAT teams,
giving rise to a “police
industrial complex” that routinely devastates
communities, terrorizes families, and destroys
innocent lives.
No longer reserved exclusively for deadly
situations,
SWAT teams are now increasingly being deployed for
relatively routine police matters, with some
SWAT teams being sent out as much as five times a
day. Nationwide, SWAT teams have been employed to
address an astonishingly trivial array of criminal
activity or mere community nuisances: angry dogs,
domestic disputes, improper paperwork filed by an
orchid farmer, and misdemeanor marijuana possession,
to give a brief sampling.
Unfortunately, general incompetence, collateral
damage (fatalities, property damage, etc.) and
botched raids tend to go hand in hand with an
overuse of paramilitary forces.
In some cases, officers misread the address on
the warrant. In others, they simply barge into the
wrong house or even the wrong building. In another
subset of cases, police conduct a search of a
building where the suspect no longer resides.
SWAT teams have even on occasion conducted
multiple, sequential raids on wrong addresses or
executed search warrants despite the fact that the
suspect is already in police custody. Police have
also raided homes on the basis of mistaking the
presence or scent of legal substances for drugs.
Incredibly, these substances have included tomatoes,
sunflowers, fish, elderberry bushes, kenaf plants,
hibiscus, and ragweed.
All too often, the shock-and-awe tactics utilized
by many SWAT teams only increases the likelihood
that someone will get hurt with little consequences
for law enforcement, even when the raids are
botched.
Botched SWAT team raids have resulted in the loss
of countless lives, including children and the
elderly. Usually, however, the first to be shot are
the family dogs.
SWAT raids are usually carried out late at night
or shortly before dawn. Unfortunately, to the
unsuspecting homeowner—especially in cases involving
mistaken identities or wrong addresses—a raid can
appear to be nothing less than a violent home
invasion, with armed intruders crashing through
their door.
That’s exactly what happened to
Jose Guerena, the young ex-Marine who was killed
after a SWAT team kicked open the door of his
Arizona home during a drug raid and opened fire.
According to news reports, Guerena, 26 years old and
the father of two young children, grabbed a gun in
response to the forced invasion but never fired. In
fact, the safety was still on his gun when he was
killed. Police officers were not as restrained. The
young Iraqi war veteran was allegedly fired upon 71
times. Guerena had no prior criminal record, and the
police found nothing illegal in his home.
The problems inherent in these situations are
further compounded by the fact that SWAT teams are
granted “no-knock” warrants at high rates such that
the warrants themselves are rendered practically
meaningless.
This sorry state of affairs is made even worse by
U.S. Supreme Court rulings that have essentially
done away with the need for a “no-knock” warrant
altogether, giving the police authority to
disregard the protections afforded American citizens
by the Fourth Amendment.
Clearly, as I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
something must be done.
When the war on drugs—a.k.a. the war on the
American people—becomes little more than a thinly
veiled attempt to keep SWAT teams employed and
special interests appeased, it's time to revisit our
drug policies and laws.
“You take the Constitution, the Bill of Rights,
all the rights you expect to have—when they come in
like that, the only right you have is not to get
shot if you cooperate.
They open that door, your life is on the line,”
concluded Bob Harte, whose home was raided by a SWAT
team simply because the family was seen shopping at
a garden store, cops found loose tea in the family’s
trash and mistook it for marijuana.
“Our
family will never be the same,” said Addie
Harte, recalling the two-hour raid that had police
invading their suburban home with a battering ram
and AR-15 rifles. As The Washington Post
reports:
Bob found himself flat on floor, hands behind
his head, his eyes locked on the boots of the
officer standing over him with an AR-15 assault
rifle. “Are there kids?” the officers were
yelling. “Where are the kids?” “And I’m laying
there staring at this guy’s boots fearing for my
kids’ lives, trying to tell them where my
children are,” Harte recalled later in a
deposition on July 9, 2015. “They
are sending these guys with their guns drawn
running upstairs to bust into my children’s
house, bedroom, wake them out of bed.”
It didn’t matter that no drugs were found—nothing
but a hydroponic tomato garden and loose tea leaves.
The search and SWAT raid were reasonable, according
to the courts.
There’s a lesson here for the rest of us. As Bob
Harte concluded: “If
this can happen to us, everybody in the country
needs to be afraid.”
John W. Whitehead, Constitutional attorney and
author John W. Whitehead is founder and president
of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.