On cannabis at 7.

The News Review:

- On cannabis at 7.
- Council worker sentenced over [pounds sterling]25,000 cannabis haul.
- ACT waits for cannabis trail results.
- Police seize 108 kilograms (238 pounds) of cannabis in Greek raid.
- TOP STORIES | WHAS11.com | News for Louisville, Kentucky

On cannabis at 7.
Free with registration – Europe Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Oct 25, 2005
| Europe Intelligence Wire (October, 2005). And headteacher Jane Wareham said she had heard of a child as young as six using the drug.

Council worker sentenced over [pounds sterling]25,000 cannabis haul.
Free with registration – Europe Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Oct 25, 2005
Council worker sentenced over [pounds sterling]25,000 cannabis haul. | Europe Intelligence Wire (October, 2005).

ACT waits for cannabis trail results.
Free with registration – Asia Africa Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Oct 25, 2005
ACT waits for cannabis trail results. | Asia Africa Intelligence Wire (October, 2005). Health Minister Simon Corbell said last week that the ACT.

Police seize 108 kilograms (238 pounds) of cannabis in Greek raid.
Free with registration – America's Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – Oct 25, 2005
Police seize 108 kilograms (238 pounds) of cannabis in Greek raid. | The America’s Intelligence Wire (October, 2005).

TOP STORIES | WHAS11.com | News for Louisville, Kentucky
WHAS 11.com – WHAS 11.com (subscription) – Oct 25, 2005
Shemelya said more would have been confiscated had Kentucky National Guard helicopters that help search the rugged hills not been needed along the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. “The more eyes we get in the sky, the more dope we can find,” Shemelya said. “The area where marijuana is traditionally grown is so rugged and rural we can’t cover it all. You can walk all day and never find it without someone in the air to direct the ground forces in. ” Shemelya said the National Guard usually provides six to eight helicopters and pilots during the peak harvest season in September to help locate marijuana and to guide camouflaged officers on the ground to it. “I’d say we probably got about 60 percent of what was growing in our primary growing area,” he said. “We simply ran out of time and money… Last year, the state was second, behind California, in the amount of marijuana confiscated from growers. Illegal growers favor the mountains of southern and eastern Kentucky because they’re remote and fall within an area known as the “marijuana belt” where soil and climate condition are ideal for growing the plants, said Lewis County Sheriff Bill Lewis. Lewis said marijuana growers planted their crops in open bottomland 20 to 30 years ago, often putting them in cornfields. Since then, he said, they’ve begun planting smaller plots in forest openings to make it harder to spot from the air. “They usually like to go to locations that have been logged, because marijuana has to have sunlight,” Lewis said. “With the smaller plots and fewer plants, they’re very difficult to locate. ” Most sheriff’s departments in the state don’t have the funding to pay for aerial searches.

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