The Jordan Harbinger Show - 821: John Nores | Reclaiming America's Wildlands from the Drug Cartels
Episode Date: April 6, 2023Lt. John Nores is a retired 28-year special operations game warden, co-host of the Warden’s Watch podcast, and author of Hidden War: How Special Operations Game Wardens are Reclaiming Ameri...ca's Wildlands from the Drug Cartels. What We Discuss with Lt. John Nores: Even though cannabis is now legal in California, drug cartels operate massive, illegal trespass grow operations on public land across the state. Trespass grow operations cause long-lasting environmental damage, generate pollution, steal water and other resources from the communities where they're raised. 6,000-10,000 people are employed by the cartels to establish and maintain these sites. Nearby residents who happen to cross paths with these criminals — even on their own property — are in danger of being assaulted or killed with little to no legal repercussions. DEA and game wardens who monitor this activity have the highest risk of death in the line of duty among law enforcement. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/821 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
In 2015, we found our first pungee pit.
Anybody that has relatives that fought in Vietnam know that the pungee pit was basically a Viet Cong guerrilla warfare tactic.
Our adversaries would dig a hole, usually square, rectangular.
It would probably be two to three feet deep.
And they'd take sharpened bamboo sticks like razor sharp, stuffed into the ground with the sharp end straight up.
And then they'd put, like, bamboo thatch over the top and dirt.
So you're just walking on a trail.
but when you get to a certain part in the trail, you fall into that trap.
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All right. Today we're talking about trespass marijuana grows. I'd never even heard of this,
but basically drug cartels send people north into California. They steal land, they steal water,
They use crazy poisons that are super lethal.
They kill all the wildlife in the area.
They're poaching.
They're killing endangered species.
They're dumping stuff into the water.
And they do this to grow marijuana at virtually no cost and then sell it on the black market.
But I thought marijuana was legal.
Yeah, but you know what's cheap?
Illegally grown marijuana that you don't have to pay for the water.
You don't have to pay for the land.
It's really, really something.
This is apparently happening all around me in my county where I live.
And I don't live in a rural area.
There's wild areas around me.
But holy crap, this is happening in my backyard.
Today we're going to explore this issue, discover who is behind it,
and the damage it does to our protected areas and even private property.
Really an interesting conversation.
Again, I had no idea that this was even going on.
All right.
Here we go with Lieutenant John Norris.
Somebody suggested this, and I was like a game warden.
I mean, so what if people take too many fish?
I know it's an environmental issue, but like it can't be that compelling.
And then, you know, I'm thinking that's some guy that, you know,
has a cool job, but it's like, okay, so you don't have a fishing license, here's a ticket.
Right.
Not quite. Not quite what you do now.
Yeah, it's an evolving discipline being a game warden and not something I anticipated.
And I got to give a shout out to one of our mutual followers that kind of connected us.
And, you know, he had heard me on other podcasts and the outreach I'm doing all over the country on the cartel threats and how game wardens are getting involved in that.
And I appreciate you taking the interest, man, and helping shed a little light on our nation's head more and being part of our thin green line of conservation and public safety.
and that's really what this boils down to.
I mean, when you think of a game warden,
you think of exactly what you just said, Jordan,
checking for fishing licenses, you know,
too many fish, overlimits of fish,
that type of thing,
somebody poaching deer, not tagging their animal.
You don't think a game wardens dressed up
as special operators,
hoisting out Black Hawk helicopters
and going after embedded cartel members
that are armed with AK-47s in our forest,
literally as close as the Silicon Valley foothills,
where I'm two or three air miles right now
as I record this from the Silicon
Valley with you. You just don't think of Gamewardens doing that, but that is one of the many
challenges we have to do now. The one thing that surprised me about this, aside from basically
spec ops, game wardens, was that you guys are attacked with weapons much more than other
officers, which, you know, if you think about it, makes perfect sense, because you're dealing with
hunters who are obviously armed, and then you throw into it, now you're dealing with cartels,
which are obviously armed. And I didn't know that Game Wardens and DEA were kind of at the top of
the line of duty in terms of danger because you're always dealing with people who are shooting
and are criminals. Whereas I guess a regular cop has a dangerous job, but, and thinking much of the
time you're dealing with people who are like, okay, fine, I shoplifted from this store. They're not
trying to murder other people or facing decades in prison. You're more likely to be assaulted than any
other type of officer, which is a little surprising, I suppose. Yeah, it's kind of mind-blowing,
But it comes down to the fact that game wardens work in such remote areas, right?
We're in the backcountry or behind lock gates.
We're deep into the parks.
So some of your more aggravated criminals that are hiding from the law, they've got arrest warrants, they're on parole, whatever the case may be.
I mean, they want to be off the beaten path.
They do not want to be in the limelight.
They don't want to be in the cities necessarily where they're going to get seen by law enforcement in plain view.
So we run across some very bad people that are hiding out there and their way in the back country.
now we're way in the back country, and we don't have backup. We don't have a lot of other people
around us. Sometimes we're alone. We don't often have a partner because game wardens are so spread out
and we've got to cover so much territory. So other than me and my patrol dog, you know,
and if I have a canine assigned to me in one of those operations, you're kind of a lone gun out there.
So you do have to be careful. We do run across some crazy stuff. You have to be able to talk
yourself out of situations. I mean, I don't know better diplomats than game wardens in general
because the ultimate tool is your mind in your mouth, right?
And all those, the pistol and the assault rifle and the shotgun and the pepper spray and the taser and all those kind of things, you really don't want to have to use.
Because when you get to that point, you know, you don't have too many more options.
But that's what makes the Game Warden job so cool.
And then to your point on you contact so many people with guns more so than any other officer typically, that is true.
But to the benefit of us, 95 plus percent of everyone that's got a firearm that we contact are great Americans.
They're great patriots, they're great community members.
They're hunting, they're fishing, they're sports shooting.
They're very safe with their firearms.
And they like us.
They love seeing a game warning because like, hey, man, you're our kind of guy or you're our kind of girl, you know?
That's the best part of the job.
And I think that's one of the reasons why my 30-year career went by so fast and it felt like 10 years.
Because a majority of the time I was dealing with such cool, like-minded people that really kept the job fresh,
made me see the light versus the dark, you know, in people doing things out in the woods.
in the cities. Certainly when we got into the cartel fight, that's where we kind of went from the
light. Like my first book, War in the Woods, goes into how we found that first grow in 04,
the shootout in 05 and the Silicon Valley foothills right here, you know, where you're very
familiar with Las Gatos. We both are being from this area and working in this area. And that kind of
changed my perception of the threats game wardens can face when we had a foreign invader
basically creating toxicly tainted cannabis for the black market. And because there's so many millions
of dollars in that profit margin for that crime. Now they're going to defend this thing with AK-47s,
with booby traps, with pungy pits. And man, that was crazy. You just don't see that in our woods, right?
So there's a wide gamut to how this story plays out and how the challenges have got more dangerous
for not only us, but all law enforcement dealing with these cartels nationwide.
How many miles is a game warden responsible for, a square miles out there? Because it seems like
you're alone, but you're not even close to anybody. Like you said, you have no backup a lot of the
time, I just don't even, you're in the middle of nowhere. That's kind of the point, right?
Yeah, it is. And it varies. I'm going to take, you know, my old home state of California as an
example. And I was basically the South Santa Clara County Game Warden to start. And, you know,
I'm close to the Silicon Valley, so I'm going to have a smaller territory than like our mountain,
or Eastern Sierra, Northern California Game Ordens. But I had easily 100 square miles, I'm going to say,
give or take. And then when I became the lieutenant to supervise Santa Clara, San Benito, and part
Santa Cruz County, now we have hundreds of square miles for five game wardens and a lieutenant.
You get into Northern California bud or you go over to the eastern Sierras and you've got guys
covering 300 square miles and very remote wilderness areas, high elevation, you know,
glacier Sierra Nevada mountains, things like that. And yeah, if it wasn't for other sheriffs
we work with and a lot of informants, a lot of public members that are kind of our eyes and ears
out there being super sluice, good ethical legal hunters and anglers and people out there
recreating, camping, shooting, mountain biking, whatever. If it wasn't for those folks, we'd be
nowhere near as effective as we are because we need that force multiplier. You've seen this in the books
and you hear this term a lot and I can't say this term enough, but game wardens are basically
on the forefront of the thin green line. And the thin green line is kind of defined as, you know,
the limited number of people out there trying to hold back environmental destruction nationwide.
Game wardens are on it from the law enforcement side. You're on it now. You're part of our thin green line,
Jay, because you're helping spread the message of the things going on out there to gain awareness.
Yeah.
You know, that's the thing we need more of.
I had no idea about most of this.
And I go a little bit slow because it is way plenty of time.
So I'll get to all this things that surprise me.
But I do remember my uncle and my dad calling a game warden once because some guys were shooting
animals from a moving vehicle, which at the time, it didn't make sense why that was illegal.
But now it's just such an unfair advantage that it's not supporting at all.
And also, it seems really dangerous to be sitting in the back of a pickup truck.
There you go.
Drinking and shooting at things that you think maybe are animals and maybe you're not totally sure are animals.
Yeah, that's the deal.
The loaded gun in a vehicle problem is where everybody has those accidental discharges and somebody loses a leg or worse.
You have a hunter casualty and somebody dies because a gun went off in a vehicle, hit somebody in a vehicle.
It got bumped, you know, whatever.
And so in the traditional days before I was doing the cartel fight primarily, I can't tell you how,
many of those citations I wrote for a loaded gun in a vehicle or shooting from a moving vehicle,
mostly under the safety problem. And it is a completely unfair advantage to be rolling down the
road at night and blasting stuff out of the window. You know, there's a certain hunter ethic thing that
just is pretty sick about that whole thing, especially the guy's spotlighting like animals at night.
That was kind of the big game warden crime that I learned about in the academy and growing up as an
ethical legal hunter under generations of hunters in my family, my dad, my granddad, my uncle,
I couldn't fathom that somebody would go out with a spotlight, sneaking around, and go find these animals at night when they're basically frozen and captive, and shoot them in the middle of the night and throw them in the truck and take them or not take them or waste them.
One of the most heinous, disgusting wildlife crimes I could even imagine, you know, and that spotlighting crime is huge in every state in the Union, and a lot of people do it.
And that's not only incredibly unsportsmanlike and disgusting, it's very dangerous, because now you're at night, you know, some of the state of the union.
You know, sometimes there's drugs and alcohol involved, and you got a lot of loaded guns, and you're shooting, you know, over cabs.
You can't see what's behind that target because it's dark.
So who knows where that bullet's going if it's going through that animal or not hitting that animal in a miss?
Just the type of crime we needed to stop.
And I did a lot of that in the first part of my career, and those were cases that mattered.
Tell me about these trespass grow operations.
That's sort of the crux of this.
How did you even find out that this was happening?
What are these, by the way?
Let's start there.
Yeah, we'll go back to the early 9th.
And essentially what was happening that I didn't realize when I started my career and I was from the San Jose Bay Area, went through the fishing game academy in Napa Valley College in 1992. And once I got that job, I knew I was going to be thrown anywhere in the state where they needed people. I didn't get to pick, hey, I want to be back home in Morgan Hill, California, right? So I ended up getting sent down after I went through the field training officer program, which is three months, one month with a hero trainer that's a awesome game ward and that's going to mentor you, make
sure you're doing it right, evaluate you every day. I did three of those throughout different
parts of the state, and then ended up in Riverside County. So the inland empire just over the hill
from Orange County. But I had the Cleveland National Forests between me and Orange County and
Riverside, and I was getting close with Forest Service Rangers, sheriff's deputies, and a Forest
service ranger, a really good friend of mine that was my partner, because we, on the federal
level, they're as spread out as we are. We would work those spotlighting cases in our national
forest by my house that I just told you about. And he said,
hey man, we're doing like this cartel grow in the national forest. I said, cartel grow. What's that?
He goes, yeah, we have Mexican nationals coming up. They're cartel based, we know, and they're growing
illegal cannabis, and they're doing it nomatically, and they're stealing water, and they're kind of
hiding and camouflaging their stuff. And this sounded like a movie. It didn't even sound like it
could be possible. Yeah. And I went on my first grow rate, actually, in, I think it was 93,
and just accompanied the Forest Rangers and sheriff's deputies. We didn't catch anybody, but I saw my first
cartel grow and it blew my mind. There were like bunk beds, you know, carved into the hillsides
with camouflage tarps that were all spray painted with leaves and branches on them. And until you got
right on top of thousands and thousands of illegal marijuana plants and saw these encampments,
you'd never see it. You could literally walk 20 feet from it on the trail before you stumble
into this thing. And it was very remote. It was like seven or eight miles into the backcountry.
And all it reminded me of was stories from my dad and my uncles that were servicemen.
several of them were in Vietnam.
I think of my granddad in World War II,
and especially Vietnam like jungle warfare, guerrilla warfare,
small hidden units, hiding in plain sight, doing damage.
That's what it looked like,
except it was in our borders,
and it was on cannabis production.
So that was the one only grow I saw down there,
and then two years later I transferred up to the Bay Area
where I'm from and based my career of the Silicon Valley
and didn't see another cartel grow until 2004.
And that's an interesting story,
and that's actually the first chapter of my first
book War in the Woods that was published 12 years ago because that was the eye opener that,
hey, this is in our backyard. And keep in mind that I grew up in South Silicon Valley,
I hike Kenry Coast State Park, which is right in our eastern foothills, Mount Hamilton,
harvested my first deer behind Mount Hamilton. That's a stone's throw from where you and I are
having this conversation right now. And I get a call from a biologist buddy of mine that I've known
since like fifth grade. He's doing his master's thesis on steelhead trout fisheries,
endangered species at San Jose State. And he's watching.
Watching a creek down on the edge of co-park out of the city of Gilroy that feeds out to the ocean,
a very pristine waterway called Coyote Creek, that to this day is one of the last migrating steelhead trout
fisheries left on the west coast. And for listeners and viewers to understand what a steelhead
trout is, they're basically an ocean-run trout that live in the ocean, but they migrate upstream
into freshwater creeks to lay their eggs and spawn, and then they migrate back to the ocean.
They are so endangered and threatened now and in such low number, they're worth about $30,000 to $40,000
of fish for a penalty from the federal level from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, right? That's how
limited Jordan these fish are. Well, the creek that my buddy's studying that has a ton of migrating
fish in it, this is like April, so all those fresh steelhead fry, the babies, they're all
hatching in the creek, all these frogs, aquatics, animals are drinking from this water, and all of a sudden
one creek is totally dry. And everything's dead. And we're right in the winter runoff where the creek
should not be dry. Calls me up, says, John, this is crazy, man. Somebody's got to be plugging up the water
up the canyon. I've never seen this before. This part of the creek is dead. So I said, yeah, that's a
problem. So I threw him in the truck. We go up the top of the mountain. I grab my pack, my gear,
my AR-15. He's an unarmed civilian, but very savvy in the woods, fortunately. And we dive into the
canyon to go try to track down where this water's going. And it was a super pristine canyon. There's
some pictures in the first book of this area. And we go down to this beautiful pristine like Box Canyon,
like something you'd see in a grand canyon, little tributary creek. And then we find the water
source where it's diverted. And you've got viscqueen line plastic. All the water is captured where
the creek can't flow below it. There's a water line at the bottom and a garden hose just starts
going down this dry creek out of view.
Wow.
So, of course, we got to check it out, right?
But it's kind of creepy.
You know, something wasn't right.
I'd never seen that.
Yeah, what do you think at this point?
You're not thinking this is a cartel marijuana grow.
You're probably just...
Not at all, me.
No, you're thinking like someone's gardening back here.
I don't even know.
What's your first hunch about what's going on?
My thought was, the first thing I thought before we even went up there, given the circumstances,
I thought it was like maybe an illegal cattleman or somebody diverting it for agriculture
on their adjoining property.
Okay.
Because I would see some of that.
I would see, you know, water illegally diverted for development or because they've got to
build something and they can't have the creek running because they need it dry.
So they illegally divert it around it.
That's what I thought it was because that's all I had ever seen.
And then I see a little garden hose in a little tiny creek.
I'm like, okay, we're going to find like squatters down below.
This is getting really strange.
And I had been in a lot of close calls up to that point.
Hadn't been in any gunfights yet, fortunately.
But I had been in a lot of situations where people were pulling.
pulling dangerous weapons. I had my weapon out. I'm in cover. I'm hoping not to have to pull the
trigger to, you know, defend myself or somebody else. And I hadn't had that happen yet.
But at the same time, you just develop a six sense of something's not right. The spider senses
start to tingle. And, you know, Jordan, that's where I was. I was like, okay, we're going to
find something really weird that I've never seen before. I don't know if it's going to be super
dangerous, but this is not a good position to be in because I have an unarmed civilian with me.
He's my reporting party and expert in the area. And the other thing about, I'm going to be a
being in this canyon man is I don't have any cell coverage in this canyon. I don't have any
radio service to hit my police radio and hit the truck up at the top of the mountain. So whatever
happens down there we need to handle, you know? Oh man. So we start going down the creek very
carefully. My partner is very tactically savvy. He grew up doing the outdoor stuff, which was great.
And then we start to see, you know, 24 inch cannabis plants on both sides of the creek. And they're
pretty fresh. They're not near harvest. You can tell they've been in the ground for a while,
but they have a long way to go.
And then we start seeing like little camouflage covered kitchen area
hiding on the side of the creek.
And then I see movement.
And here come two growers.
And they're in the olive drab green, battle dress uniform, a la military style.
They've got the AKs.
One guy's got a machete and he's kind of digging around some plants.
The other guy has his gun out.
He's kind of scanning, looking around and looking behind him,
not knowing anybody's down in this remote canyon.
And they're dead silent.
they're whispering or they're not talking at all. They're just kind of looking at each other and nod in their
heads. And so what I'm seeing is I'm seeing guys that don't belong there. I'm seeing guys with
tactical proficiency. And at this point, with my law enforcement training and the tactical work
I had done, I'm like, that's how we work on a SWAT team. That's how we move through the woods
when we're tracking a fugitive or we're tracking like a mountain line that's done damage or public
safety. I said, these guys are not your typical poacher. And now we're hiding because the last thing I
want to do is get into a gunfight with one of these guys or both of them with an unarmed civilian
biologist with me and no way to communicate to anybody. And we watched him for probably 10, 15 minutes,
and they were tactically, their situational awareness was up. And they checked their plants. They
turned around. They went back up the canyon out of view and that was it. As soon as they got out
of view and we could safely go straight up that mountain and get out, we left the area. Wow. And then I
processed what we were looking at. Yeah. That's pretty scary. I didn't realize you didn't even have any
way to contact anyone, you're just out there. I mean, if they had seen you before you saw them,
that we might not be having this conversation. Possibly we might not be having this conversation.
That's not an exaggerated statement. And I can also say that that was historical because
that's the base of Henry Coe Park where I learned a backpack. I learned to really love wildlife.
And where I was actually, I was an engineering major at San Jose State, my first year in college,
looking at the ROTC program for special forces and doing a military GI Bill thing. And now I'm,
in Co Park on a winter break in college, my first year of engineering school, and I meet a
game warden for the first time, and it changed my world. I'm like, I'm doing the wrong job, man.
And so point of my story is the damage was right on the edge of that park where I grew up. So this was
personal. It's like, who are these guys? They don't look like they're citizens and no dig on
anything immigration. We're not having any negativity on that conversation. But these guys look like
foreign invaders. They looked like more of a militia, more of a Sandinista. Something was going on,
a military type force small. And I later learned that those were basically a cartel cell from
Mexico that had been in the area for now decades throughout all of California in the West
Coast and starting to branch out east to other states for the black market cannabis trade.
And they were doing it on public lands. And I happened to run across one for the first time
on that day in 2004. So they're stealing the water. How much water are we talking?
about because aren't cannabis plants pretty thirsty? I mean, I don't really know, actually,
no that I think about it. What we've got scientifically from biologists that study this stuff,
legal growers that use water and conserve water and use as little as possible for legitimate
cannabis, because there is a faction of very environmentally conscious cannabis farmers out there.
They're actually allied with our cannabis enforcement program through the Department of Fish and Wildlife,
my alma mater, where I retired from. And the general rule of thumb is, on an average, about five gallons of
water per day per plant for an outdoor cannabis plant. Oh, wow. And Jordan, when we get into the math on that,
this grow that we found in 2004 that we got out of safely and later rated with a bunch of agencies
because we found it, so we brought everybody in. That was 7,000 plants. And those plants were a
strain that take about 250 days to get to harvest time. And if you look at 7,000 plants for 250 days
at five gallons of per plant per day and start multiplying it and add up all those zeros, that grow
responsible for probably five or more million gallons of water stolen for one gross site.
Wow. And it's not only about the water loss, I mean, because obviously you and I are both here
in California. We know how the drought has stricken this state over the last 10 years, especially
now. We're on water rations right now throughout the state of California and other states. Even in my
new home state of Montana, we're experiencing drought levels like never before as well. The whole west
and southwest is dealing with this. So water is becoming liquid gold, man. It's becoming a rare,
precious commodity across the globe. And illegal cannabis is one of the biggest water
stealers going on anywhere in America, and especially in the Golden State, because what these
cartels are doing. So I didn't know any of this then. I mean, I was thinking, hey, they're
diverting water, they're poisoning it, my fish are dying. That's a bad problem. It never crossed
my mind of, what is this impacting for water levels in general? For underground water for wells,
for farmers, for ranchers, for drinking water for cities. I had no idea. You know, we had never
experienced water loss like this, and now that was just one of what would later lead to thousands
of grows that we would work until I retired, all stealing millions of gallons of water unless we
stopped them and basically stopped the stealing, but we would still have a loss up to the point that
we finished the grow off. How do you find them? Just walking around out there, there's such a huge
amount of land. That's why we didn't know they were there before. So do you just wait for hunters
to stumble across them and call you? Or what? That's a good way we find them, because people that
go in the outdoors and go off the beaten path, get off the public paved trails, and go deep into
water sources to hunt, to fish, just to get real serene and have some solitude. Those are the folks
that find them. And our turn in a poacher hotline when I retired was over 70% of illegal
grows being found by these outdoor enthusiasts, right? And then it gets to the point of what type
of safety training? What do you tell people like, what do you do if you run into a grow site? And I
teach that all over the country now, and we do it at the agency level as well. You know, you
may run across these in any state that has a decent climate in summertime months that could be
a cartel grow, you know, and you just want to be really careful when you see it, document it,
take a photograph, get a geotag, creep out of there carefully, don't go any further down that trail,
and report it immediately when you get out there. And now, you know, this Hidden War, as we're calling
it, the title of the new book, is aptly named a Hidden War because so many people don't realize
this is going on, even though we've been talking about this for 15 years.
on documentaries, investigative news pieces, high-reach podcasts like yours, and Joe Rogan,
who's part of the Hidmore fight now in the Thin Green Line and Meat Eater, all of that.
And I still am going across the country and people like, Lieutenant, I had no idea this was
going on in our country.
I hear about the human trafficking.
I hear about fentanyl, but poison cannabis and animals and, you know, game wardens.
What's going on with that?
Yeah.
So there's a lot of water being stolen.
And it's not only on public land now, man.
we got to look at the private land issue.
And this may jump ahead a little bit in the conversation, but it'll all make sense.
You know, one thing that you learn about in, and I really go into this and Hidmore,
Edition 1, and then I update with the latest one that just dropped Edition 2 that you've got a copy of,
how bad has cannabis production, how bad have the cartels increase the problem since we regulated
under Prop 64 as an example in California.
And it's gotten worse.
Regulating cannabis didn't help stop the black market.
it actually incentivized it. And so now we have the public land threats of these cartels going
out that we've been fighting for almost 20 years now. But we've also got private land tracks
and outdoor rural communities with these big hoop houses full of illegal cannabis that are in
plain view. You don't have to go sneak around to find them because illegal cannabis, under Prop 64,
they watered it down to a misdemeanor. I see. And if you're a juvenile cartel grower,
it's an infraction. So if you have seven,
illegal plants in your backyard is a mom and pop operation, or you have 7,000 in a hoop house
with EPA banned carburens sprayed all over them to keep everything off it, but now you have
a neurotoxin on the plants that are going out to the consumer on illegal water stealing,
illegal wells, all kinds of other crimes. It's a misdemeanor. So these guys are doing it in
plain sight, knowing that less than 10% of their product statewide is ever going to get
interdicted and taken, and they're probably not going to see jail time or not lose their property
because unless there's aggravated things we can charge felonies on, they're going to face a misdemeanor,
and they're just overwhelming law enforcement. So we've kind of greenlit the cartels to do more damage
than they were back in the days when it was just that outdoor backcountry in the woods, public land grow problem,
unfortunately. Yeah, it sounds like a huge mess. So how do you take them down? I mean, once you find one
or somebody reports on one, I assume you raid it. How do you plan something like that?
Very carefully, because we've been in, it was six,
gunfights I had been involved in with my team members, give or take, that we had either experienced
together as a unit or individual officers have been involved in gunfights with cartel gunmen
by the time I retired in 2018. And I can't tell you how many close call gunfights we had
that fortunately we didn't have to press the trigger because we had really advanced good canines
that were able to get a bite apprehension on a cartel gunman that was pulling a gun but got control
of them before anybody had to fire a shot. So everybody went home. We go to massive
lengths of officer safety. You've got to remember that when this started, like when I found that
grow in 2004, we brought in a task force of state cops and park rangers and sheriffs that did this
type of work, and we had never done it as game warrants. We hadn't raided a cannabis grow site.
There was no reason to, you know, nobody knew that there was an environmental crime related to it,
that game warden should be involved in. But it was in our area. It was in our backcountry forest. So
after that, started working with the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Marijuana Eradication Team very closely.
we formed a great relationship. And then we got in the first near fatal where we actually had
one of my partner officers shot by an AK-47 round and almost didn't survive that ordeal.
Wow.
On Sierra Zool in August 5th of 2005, which is just above the city of Las Gatos that you were
very familiar with. We both are. And I remember that day when we were ambushed,
raiding that grossite, three game warrants and three sheriff's deputies and an unarmed
ranger from Mid-Penital Open Space was there with us. And seeing the tactical proficient
see they exercised, how they had their gross site set up, how they had cover, how they had
tactical advantage with a little bit of uphill advantages we went in. And the sheriffs I was working
with, you know, were snipers. They were on their SWAT team. I was also outside of fishing
game circles, a sniper now and doing sniper class instruction and doing all the SWAT stuff and getting
all those skill sets knowing that we were going to need them someday as game wardens. And now I could
not have envisioned it would have been for a cartel targeted fight, but that's what it turned into. And that
day when we were ambushed and my partner was shot through both legs and bleeding out of four holes
in both thighs. Wow. And waiting three agonizing hours for an air rescue before he gets
airlifted out of there literally within a couple minutes of dying of blood loss and shock.
Tough officer. I mean, he absolutely fought through it every minute, kind of helpless, waiting
that long for him to get off the mountain. But he did make a full recovery and he's had an exemplary career,
great, great young man. And we were very lucky.
that he survived that ordeal number one,
or I'm sure we may not have stayed involved
in that type of work as game wardens,
and you and I might not be having this conversation first.
But secondly, we would not have been able to expose
the environmental component of how dangerous these guys are
to our wildlife waterway and wild land resources
and make it a priority for us
and actually form up our own team,
which Hidden War goes into in depth in 2013 when we formed that team.
Now the planning was going to be very, very structured.
It wasn't going to be ad hoc of just jumping together with other agencies and not having the right equipment, not having compatible radios, not having an air rescue plan and some redundancy in case, you know, you've got to get somebody off that hill quickly.
We basically change the game where we will find these grows a lot ourselves, Jordan.
We'll find them by just going out and scouting the right hillside that faces to the sun to the south and where waterways are.
And 50% of the time, when I'd go on a scout with my sheriff's buddies or with my game warren partners, we would want to,
One out of two times find a gross site in the Silicon Valley foothills.
Hands down. Aerial surveillance. We'll find them from the air if you know what to look for.
You know, when those plants are having iridescent green to them, even through brush and all the manzanita and oak scrublin we have in all foothills around the Silicon Valley.
You can see it that way. And satellite imagery has gotten amazing.
You know, we didn't have that in the days when that gunfight happened. And now we can literally scroll through, you know, sensitive satellite military level images and go, wow, man, look at the terracing there.
That wasn't there, you know, two weeks ago.
So there are a lot easier to find now.
And it's really alarming out of how many you actually find when you just look at a Google image
or have that person, that hiker, that hunter, that horseback rider, he or she, and they stumble on something and go, hey, man, I heard about this or I saw a presentation.
I saw this on National Geographic, one of your shows or whatever.
This looks like a grow.
What do I do?
And that's exactly what it is.
They found it.
They got out of there.
They stayed safe.
They reported it right away.
and then nine times out of 10, they're 100% accurate.
It is an active growth site.
If it is on private land, but it's a trespasser on private ranch,
or it's public land on our national parks, public parks, city parks, whatever,
nine times out of 10, it's going to be a cartel grow.
And now we're going to plan it carefully to have everything we need the day we rate it.
Canines, trauma medic on staff, additional backup teams.
We formed up a very proficient sniper team, the Delta team,
for the marijuana enforcement team when we formed that unit up. And the reason we had a sniper
unit more than anything else was to provide overwatch and cover for our people going in
out of gross sites in areas where the terrain allowed that. Because what a sniper can see ahead
of time can save so much violence later rather than us stumbling into somebody and now we're
seven yards from each other in dense brush and the trails meet. And now it's a motto,
a motto gunfight that you can't avoid. Because he's already got the gun out. So all those things really
changed the game. And I can proudly say the guys that continued the team behind me made even more
improvements, stepped up their equipment, their tactics continued to evolve to get better. And that team
with my old agency haven't, knock on wood, had an officer involved shooting where any of them
were hurt or any of our canines were hurt, fortunately, since well after I retired. And we certainly
hope that trend stays. You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger show with our guest, Lieutenant
John Norris. We'll be right back.
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All right.
Now back to Lieutenant John Norris.
So how many guys work on these sites?
You mentioned two in the one that you found.
Are there huge ones with like dozens of guys, or are they usually pretty small because they have to maintain a low profile?
The trend is kind of changed.
In the outdoor growth sites, the trespass ones are deep in the woods, and those have lessened significantly.
You don't see a lot of those anymore because under Prop 64 now, they don't have to hide deep in the woods.
They can just go on a private land track that a rural dirt road will run up to.
And the problem, though, is private land, in plain sight, super hoop houses, you have far more armed growers, far more potentially dangerous growers that are cartel-based than we did in the outdoors.
On an outdoor grow, you typically have two growers that are very skilled at diverting water, at growing really good marijuana, at keeping insects and people and everything off their plants, largely about bringing in these EPA-baned toxic, insecticides, rodenticides called carbopherin, that EPA actually banned.
from using them for agriculture in America over 20 years ago because they're so toxic even when they're
diluted. It's a felony to possess these poisons and these insecticide chemicals, but the cartels
will bring them from across the border in Tijuana because they know when they get this stuff on the
bud that people are smoking, making concentrated cannabis out of, or the leaf or the waterway
under, you know, basically the water and the soil all around those plants. Nothing's going to get to the
plants. Everything's going to die within minutes, if not seconds, whether they're rabbit.
their fox, their mountain lions, they're black bears, or if we stumble into one and we don't
have a protective equipment on and ingest this or inhale some of this odor, we too could be,
you know, severely incapacitated if not killed. We're talking about neurotoxins, anticoagulants,
really, really potent stuff. And that's what these guys are doing. And now, so the two growers
will set that up. And if the grow is typically over 5,000 plants come harvest time, and on August 5th,
2005, one of the main reasons we encountered heavily armed gunmen that were ready to go early
in the morning is because they were in the middle of harvest time. So that's when they have the most
people in these gross sites. That's when they're the most dangerous. That's when they bring in
the Sicario-type gunmen to defend the crop from law enforcement, from the public, from other
rival gangs from taking their crop during harvest. And you could have 10 guys in a gross site.
Wow. We know that morning, Jordan, on all the Sierra Zool Mountain, that was one of like five
gross sites where our gunfight happened. We locked that hillside down for the weekend, and we were all
taken off the hill because we had had my partner shot near fatally. I had been in a gunfight. I had
returned fire on his gunman. Another gunman that had a sought-off shotgun trained on me and one other
game warden at seven yards through the brush that we never saw was seconds from taking me out and my
partner out. But a sheriff's deputy, Craig Divert, call sign snake on the sheriff's department, a great
sniper, he saw that guy and was able to engage and neutralize that guy before he could shoot us. Wow. And I mean,
I was seconds from taking a face full of buckshot. And I had pictures of that weapon that I show him
presentations to go, guys, this is how crazy this gets. And thank heaven for my partners that day that
were tactically ready. And all of us kind of fell into suit to doing the right thing. And we didn't have
more than one officer hurt. But we didn't ever want that to happen again. So our administration took it very
seriously, gave us the tools, gave us the support. It would take another decade plus before we'd
have our own specialized team of Game Morton's just doing that, that I was very blessed to co-found and
then lead. But man, we sure do a lot better job having a dedicated force to it and a lot more
resources to do it now because this is a domestic, eco-terrorist threat. And these cartels
are not messing around on any level, as you know. Yeah, so they're spraying these ban poisons
everywhere. I assume that also gets in the water that they're stealing, right? Because they're doing it
near these creeks, they probably just dump it all over the place. Absolutely. And it kills everything
that it touches. I mean, that's awful. It's wild. I mean, there's so many of these sites out there.
It seems terrifying. You mentioned earlier, these Vietnam-style booby traps. So they're setting this up,
what, around there, so that if you happen to stumble upon it, you can just die falling into a pit
or something like that. Exactly. And I think the most shocking thing is when in 2015, we found our
first pungy pit, and I have pictures of it in both books, actually.
And what's interesting about that is anybody that has relatives that fought in Vietnam know that the pungee pit was basically a Viet Cong guerrilla warfare tactic where our adversaries would dig a hole, usually square rectangular.
It would probably be two to three feet deep.
And they take sharpened bamboo sticks like razor sharp stuffed into the ground with the sharp end straight up.
And then they'd put like bamboo thatch over the top and dirt.
So you're just walking on a trail.
But when you get to a certain part in the trail, you fall into that trap, that rectangular bottomless door, and you fall right into those pungy pits.
And all those spiked up sharpened bamboo stakes, what do they do?
They shear your ankle.
They take out a soldier's foot, inner thigh.
And what the Viet Cong would do is they would dip human excrement at the tips of those sticks, knowing that the bacteria infection potential from just aside from, in addition to a sharpen bamboo stick, if it's not going to kill that soldier right away, he's going to have a blood,
infection, that guy's taken out. You know, two or three other guys are taken out to get him to help. Well,
what we started to see was, like, Whiskeytown National Park up in Shasta County, Brian Boyd, great operator.
You read about him in the books, K-9 Phoebe, who had a 13-year legendary career and saved my
life and the life of my partners way too many times to count. Amazing dog. She detected a pungy pit
on a trail right before our lead officer from the sheriff's department stepped into it.
And this was several hundred yards from the gross site on a public National Park trail that everybody was hiking on, not even close to the growth site.
And it was set there to keep anybody from going any further, so they would never discover the growth site.
But in it were the sharpened sticks, except the EPA ban carbofuran was smeared all over the tips of them, because these cartels know how dangerous those toxins are.
And the only reason it was detected is our dogs are in those gross sites so much and trained to detect weird smells.
and these toxic have a very unique smell.
And Phoebe detected that and alerted
before our point man walked right into that trail.
Phoebe's your dog?
Phoebe was one of our team dogs.
It's pretty miraculous, but in all of her years of work,
and she had 116 cartel apprehension bites
and 8 to 900 more apprehensions
where she didn't have to bite where people just gave up.
So, you know, when you look at the numbers,
that's about 1,000 bad guys
that are in this country illegally
with criminal felony histories
doing a ton of damage to not only our wildlife and our public safety in our woods,
we're going to remember these cartels that we're apprehending in gross sites are the same ones
that are making dirty fentanyl pills in labs, right?
And you and I both know right now the fentanyl crisis, and I think we're approaching
200,000 nationwide deaths since fentanyl kind of dropped, these dirty lab cartel lookal-like
fentanyl pills dropped on America about five years ago.
It's blowing minds and it's horrible.
The human trafficking cells, the sex trafficking cells, the gun running cells, they're all the same cartels.
It's just a different part of the organization doing a different type of crime. So, you know, we've apprehended some of these cartel growers that in the winter, when they're not growing weed in the woods, they're cooking 22 pounds of methamphetamine.
Wow.
Or they're trafficking dirty pills from dirty labs in Mexico for fentanyl now. And they're all doing human trafficking for big money, because it's a big moneymaker for the cartels, as we know, in all 50 states. And we know now with the border policy changing and becoming little, if any, border policy, to put it mildly, the cartels have carte blanche to bring contraband people, whatever they're going to do across our southern and now our northern borders, incentivizing more of these crimes. So any time in the woods, we would go do.
a cartel weed case, let's say, and Phoebe made a great apprehension. She took a guy out that was doing a lot of
other very bad things outside of the weed trade or was working for somebody that was diversifying
and doing those activities as well. So, man, I can't talk enough about dogs and everybody loves a good dog
story. We all have dogs or cats or whatever and pets. But man, they're lifesavers and they're
invaluable members of our team. And we have a lot of great dogs working on the team that I can't
name, obviously, because they're operational for security reasons.
Sure. How do you clean it up? You're going in there and then you get these guys, hopefully they're there and you can arrest them. But if they're there for months, there's got to be literal human excrement everywhere, trash everywhere, because they've got to eat stuff and throw stuff away. They're sealing water. They've got pipes or whatever in there and chemicals, weapons. I've got two little kids here. We throw away a ton of garbage. Maybe they're not doing as much damage with Amazon Prime as we do, but otherwise they're still leaving a lot of crap. That's a lot of crap all of them.
play. Yeah, I mean, it's a literal shit show of trash out there. No exaggeration. There's a couple
color pictures in the new editions of Hidmore that you've got that go into just one of these
gross sites. And I have a couple of snaps of just, we're not even getting the deadly poisons and the big
water diversions and all the nastiness in the creeks, just the trash. And especially at
a gross site that's been out there more than a year. Because, you know, these guys start as early
as March, April, getting their plants in the ground. And they might go all the way till September,
October, if they're not interdicted by a team like ours. And you're right, it's two guys,
and in harvest time, it's up to 10, maybe more guys. And you just get the human excrement,
you get the cooking oils, you get the propane bottles, you get the food wrappers, and you just
get that stuff stacking up. And they just stuffing in the ground, they might, you know, dig a little
pit and just like a mini landfill going on in these gross sites. But it's all the fertilizer bags.
It's all the roundup. And then it's all the carbopherin and the little deadly pink bottles that we
definitely have pictures of in the publication.
so people can know what this stuff looks like and don't go anywhere near it, right?
Don't touch it.
Don't breathe it.
Make sure the wind is not coming at you.
Make sure the wind's going at your back toward it.
You don't even want to get a whiff of this stuff.
It's so deadly.
The hardest part about the job, and when we formed the marijuana enforcement team,
and we really needed other agencies to help us with this,
and by 2013, when we started that team,
everybody was kind of on board that you can't just go in and try to apprehend these guys,
and you can't go in and just try to destroy these poison plants
and remove them from the market.
from consumption for poison, all that, you've got to do something with the trash and you definitely
got to restore the waterway. And it's called reclamation or what we call environmental restoration.
And it's by far the hardest, most arduous, most time-consuming and most resource eating as far as
blade time for helicopters and money to clean these sites up. Because if you have a ban poison
container in there, that's a hazardous material now, right? Yeah. So you've got to handle it with a
hazmat team. We might not even be able to touch it with nitral gloves, with our N95
mask with our long sleeve uniforms that we can do decon on. I mean, there's heavy, heavy Cal and
federal OSHA protocol now on how we handle this stuff in growth sites. But I can tell you right now,
when I retired, we were able to reclimate the day of our missions, about 44% of all the grows
we would raid that day. And that doesn't sound like a big number, but when we were coming
from less than 5% nationally, especially statewide in California, because other agencies were like,
hey, man, I'm not collecting trash and cleaning up. We don't have that bandwidth.
We're going to go arrest.
We're going to eradicate and we're going to helicopter out or we're going to hike out.
We're out of there.
We have too much other things to do.
It's too costly.
We can't tie up our SWAT units that long.
But that's all changed.
And it's changed for the good that everybody's on board, that water is so precious.
It's the major, major, Achilles heel of what we're losing.
And then poison water is even worse.
So we're reclamating.
And they're reclamating a lot more now.
Since I retired, we're bringing civilian teams in that can learn to safely deal with these poisons.
They can get trained in it.
We're getting NGO 501-3C funds developed for groups to go in and reclimate sites.
And even if there's not another growth site on public land for the next 10 years in California,
hypothetically, which will never happen.
But if that were to happen hypothetically, we would keep these reclamation crews on historical
growth sites that haven't been cleaned up going back 20 years probably for a decade, conservative estimate.
I mean, that's how much stuff is still out there.
And not only in California, brother, but in other states that have growing climates,
not as good as California, but they can still do it either indoors or outdoors.
If you leave all the stuff there, it's just going to pollute for years and years.
I mean, I guess the water is going to get diverted.
The chemicals are going to leak out and everything.
And it just seems like such a huge mess.
Can you even get trucks back there?
I mean, what do you do?
Just take hundreds of pounds of garbage and you've got to lift it out with a helicopter
and plastic pipes?
Yeah, no, you're hitting on the head, bud.
What you've got to do is we get as far as we can on trucks.
We have a landing zone with big dump trucks and trailers.
We have to have an airship.
We'll usually hike in.
We'll bag all the trash in really, really heavy Cal-Tran contractor bags.
We'll tie them up.
We'll collect all the water pipe.
We'll take out all the poisons.
If there's any diversions or things in the creek immediately, we'll rebuild a creek.
I can't tell you how many little mini dams we have taken apart slowly, taking out the rock and the concrete they bring in, the dirt and the adobe, just to open up that waterway so it'll flow again.
and then make sure the water diverting pipe is taken out
and that black poly pipe that you see the pictures of
in all the books, if you leave that stuff out there,
they're just going to come back and use it again.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Your question is like, well, what happens if you don't clean it up?
Two things, and you hit it on the head.
One, the environmental damage is going to continue,
but what we got to realize is if we don't take that infrastructure out,
that cartel cell is going to wait a year at the most
and go, you know what?
I know how tied up law enforcement are right now,
And I know that right now in California under Prop 64, everything I'm doing is a misdemeanor.
And they're going to get less than 10 percent.
It probably are grows statewide.
So I'm just going to go use all that infrastructure that's going to cost me nothing.
I'm going to get that water diversion going again because all the water pipes there.
I just got to start the flow again.
I'm going to set up a camp.
I might move a quarter mile downstream where I'm not exactly where my last camp was.
And you know what?
70, 80 percent chance.
I'm going to get away with it.
And if I do lose that grow, you know, that's my satellite grow to tie up law enforcement resources, say, in Los Gatos.
because I got 20 other girls I'm responsible for as a plaza boss, which is what they call these guys that are overseeing a particular sector of the state within a particular cell or a particular type of cartel.
And now they're like, hey, it's totally worth it.
But I go into this in chapter four of the new book.
I got to sit through a debrief of a plaza boss that our white dope team in Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office interdicted on a 22-pound meth amphetamine cook in the winter.
And this guy was facing a lot of time.
Yeah, sure, 20 pounds.
Yeah, it's big, man.
That's a big quantity for a better part of probably the West Coast.
But obviously, he wanted to be cooperative and, you know, had to be protected and all that,
but wanted to speak freely and, you know, maybe affect what it was going to happen to him as far as his sentence and things like that.
But it was the first time what we all thought we knew in the green dope side of the illegal cannabis trade from the cartels.
I got to ask a lot of questions directly in that interview, along with DEA and officials and interpreters.
and we knew that this reclamation wasn't just about environmental restoration.
We all wanted to convince other agencies that, hey, it's not just about, you know,
smoky the bear, cleaning up the woods, restoring waterways, protecting, you know, what they've destroyed.
Think about if we take all that out and we've already rated it.
Maybe we've caught a few guys.
What are the odds of guys going back there from that organization to affect that particular sensitive waterway?
And I said it's slim to nil because we were seeing a site we'd reclimate and we'd watch it year after year after
year and very rarely, if ever, would a cartel come back and use that site. But if we didn't
reclimate it, like in the example we just discussed, about 50% chance by the next year,
a cartel group was going to use it because they knew it had water. They could set it up very easily.
They didn't have to go find a new creek. And I asked him that. And he basically said,
you know, it's interesting. He said, I had not seen our grow sites that you guys had rated
up until a couple years ago actually cleaned up. And we're like, what's going on? And I knew that
our agency, Department of Fish and Wildlife, Forest Service, and very like-minded sheriffs
departments like Santa Clara that were very environmentally conscious and were putting their resources
as a sheriff's department, not a conservation agency by define, and they were doing cleanup.
And the cartels were starting to notice like, why are they cleaning crows up, man?
That's weird.
We've never seen this in 20 years.
These things never get cleaned up.
But he validated what we're talking about.
He said, no, I'm not going to go back in there.
It's cost me $30,000 of our organization's money.
to set up the water line and get all the camping equipment and get these guys equipped and
across the border if they're not already embedded and bring the poisons up from Mexico.
So I'm not going to risk that.
Why would I go back into an area that you guys have cleaned up?
Spend the money again and it's already on your radar.
So that was like a Yahoo victory moment where we could tell other agencies, hey, guys, help us reclimate,
even if it's in the off season, we'll bag it, we'll bring in a helicopter in the middle of winter,
we'll hoist it all out, we'll do the heavy lifting, whatever.
And that's made in a dent, but it's also helped deter the cartoon.
from doing what they're doing in the woods, and it's going well. And we still do that every year
constantly. You know, I'm not going to say it's the most important job, because obviously,
if you got an armed cartel gunman that's doing a whole lot of other human public safety crimes,
you want to get him out of circulation for sure. Yeah. But it's that lasting effect on the
environmental side. You know, it's public safety first, and it's the triple W's wildlife waterway
wild lands that we're all about on the thin green line. And when we can do both, that feels really good.
So maybe I'm naive here. Obviously, I know nothing about catching criminals.
but would it not be worth luring these guys to come back to the same site and just check those
sites and then arrest the guys because you have essentially a honeypot to where these guys,
you know they're coming back.
So just watch it with a drone and then it's like, yep, these idiots are back and then you go raid them
or whatever.
What am I missing?
Why do you want them to go to a new site?
That's what I don't understand.
Yeah, yeah.
You're making good sense.
And you're actually, without going into, you know, Intel and how we do business.
Yeah.
Let's just say what you just said makes a lot of sense and it's been done and it's worked.
Okay.
We've had different cat and mouse games of doing things.
The only thing is if you're going to try that tactic, you kind of got to look at, okay,
if I'm going to do that, I'm not going to do it on a sensitive waterway that has like migraines.
Yeah, of course.
I'm going to do it where the water diversion is kind of contained.
Maybe they're not taking too much water from a creek or they're doing it with what they call check dams
and it's a series of dams that they fill up in the heavy winter floods.
Then they don't pull from the creek anymore.
We've seen that.
And, you know, ones that are accessible, you know, that you can go in and actually have a honeypot
and catch some people.
And it is.
It's a cat-mouse game.
It's an evolving science.
The ultimate goal of what we're trying to do is put enough pressure on them,
knowing that there's skilled teams that are not going to just chase you around or fly the helicopter
over so you get scared away.
You hide in your little hole for a while.
We leave after we cut all your plants and clean up the grow site.
And you just go, okay, well, I'm not going to work this gross site, but my boss on my
burner cell phone that I'm going to call tonight, he's going to have another grow that he's
going to have me in in a day.
And it might be 200 miles in Northern California.
These guys, think of it like a contractor crew of skilled builders, right?
You're finishing one house and the drywall guys are coming in and you framed it, but you're a framer.
And now of a sudden your framing's done for any reason, maybe because the house burned down or the guys moved on to another stage.
You're just going to be moved to another complex to go frame another house.
That's how these guys work.
They're very skilled, man.
And let's just say they're a very formal enemy, given how proficient they are and how skilled they are at camouflage and hiding in plain side is you and I,
start to talk of the story, you're seeing the different layers of what means they're going to go to
to make the money they can make. And it's a lot of money. How long are these growth sites in use?
Are they around for months or do they just use the same places for years on end until they get
raided or discovered or they fall apart for some reason? Yeah, that's a great question.
And I'm going to take the Sierra Zool 2005 shootout site, August 5th. We went into what we knew was
one site that was being used again that had been used at least two or three seasons before,
what our intel and our pre-scouts with the sheriffs and what the sheriffs had done ahead of us even being involved, dictated.
But that weekend, when we locked that mountain down and there were guys camped out with MBGs and all of our officers from multiple agencies
because we knew there were a lot of bad guys in the area and we wanted to catch people that might have gotten away.
And when our helicopter teams and our other officers started to hike that mountain, they found like five other gross sites on an entire hillside that spanned over a mile.
actually a couple of miles.
And when we started to look at the leaf litter,
the cuts in the trees,
the amount of trash,
that growth site had been in play for at least five years
before it was detected.
And so these growers, man,
they are going to use that same site
as long as they don't get caught.
So if we never interdicted
and it's in Sierra Azul,
it's in Las Gatos,
it's over in Santa Cruz County,
on that side of the midpin,
if it's in Henry Coast State Park,
they're just going to keep stealing water,
adding to the trash pile,
killing a lot of stuff downstream,
until they finally get caught. And some of these don't get caught. A lot of times we've had situations
where the gross site will have been used for two, three, four, five, ten years. And then the water
table just changed, or we went into a drought and they didn't have water anymore. So they just left. They
never got caught. They did a ton of damage in a decade. And then Big Horn Sheet biologists,
say in the Eastern Sierra's, it works for our agency as a biologist, finds this thing on a survey and
goes, oh my God, man, I can't believe what I walked into. I mean, it looked like an after
growth site. Like as if you took that snapshot in time, right, like a crazy movie and you walk into it,
and it's like everything's frozen and the camp is there, dead plants are there, water diversions are
there, all the supplies, old food is still there. There might be guns, there might be camos,
there might be tents, bunks, whatever, but they never got caught. They just left because they ran out of
water. And now that's been there for all those many more years that a biologists had to find.
And we're going to go reclimate that even though we never rated it. So long-windedly, it could be,
two months because we catch it early and we burn it to the ground and capture them, and that's ideal.
I always like when we would find these gross sites really early in the late winter, like about now.
Like right now we're talking Marchish, right, beginning to March.
This is when everything kind of gets started, whether it's a wet year or a dry year.
And we can start finding these gross sites when they're in the ground by April and May and the plants are like two inches tall and you have 10,000 plants that are two inches tall and you fill a Safeway plastic shopping bag and your eradication's done.
they haven't stolen that much water.
That's the ideal scenario.
It's when it gets late in the summer
and the plants are 11 feet tall,
they've stolen millions, if not upon millions of gallons of water
and tons of dead wildlife.
They're very comfortable in their environment.
They know every sound.
They know every trail.
They're armed.
They have escape routes.
Now it becomes far more dangerous for us,
and it's already had a massive environmental impact
and 11-foot plants aren't fun to destroy
no matter how you do it.
We like the little babies.
What do you do with the marijuana after you?
I assume you can't sell it even though it's legal in California because of Prop 64. I mean,
that might sound like a dumb question to some people, but I know if you seize a house or a car
belonging to a drug dealer, you auction it off. But I guess if you seize cocaine from a drug dealer,
you don't sell it, this is somewhere in between. But the whole toxic, super toxic poisonous pesticide
all over it might preclude that. Yeah, you know, and I don't get that question very often. So it's a
great question. You're right. It's an illegal cannabis product, so it can never be in the legal
market. And under the legal market under Prop 64, you basically have to trace seed to sale. You have
certain protocols and permits you need. You have to be able to document where the plant was grown,
where it was processed, ultimately what dispensary or what consumer outlet it went to. And usually
that's through a distributor, right? Everything is documented. There's a lot of money. There's a lot of
overhead. There's a lot of red tape just like a normal American business where you pay taxes and you have
health and human safety protocols. All this stuff is strictly black market. It would never be legal,
even if it was a organically pure product grown in the outdoors or even in an indoor operation,
because it came from an illegal source. So we have to destroy it very carefully. Sometimes, if it's not
budded, we can cut it, we can destroy it in place where it's just, it's not going to be a poison or
pollutant out there, it's just going to be a dried up plant out of the way where it's going to not
get into water. We will hoist out a lot of it in helicopter nets. We've had to carry that stuff out,
wrapped up in tarps on our backs. We even had, and had more we talk about canine,
Febe, Arm Gunman, and a pack mule named Stanley, where we had Stanley one pack mule,
and I knew the pack mule handler very close to where I grew up in Morgan Hill, and we didn't
have any helicopter that day, and he had one pack mule out of 20, because 19 of his other pack
meals were already up in the Ossimity Basin to run pack trips, and I said, John, can we use
packmule? Anything, man, we cannot lug this out ourselves. Yeah, it seems like a good idea
to use a meal. It's a great idea. Whatever you can use. Helicopters are great, but ultimately
you can't just dump that stuff in the dump. This stuff goes to landfills that are specially selected,
you know, a specific hole is dug, it's mulched up carefully, it's witnessed, it's videotaped,
it's buried, it's destroyed, so it can never be used, never be dug up. When it comes to the ban
poisons, if some of that stuff has banned toxins, we have to dispose of it very carefully,
whether it's a non-penetrable liner in a landfill so it can't seep into waterways. All kinds of
stuff like thinking about a waste product from another hazardous material, how do you,
you deal with that stuff, you know? You can't just put it in the ground because you're going to have
residual into the water table, into the soil, and carbophorin is that bad. Medafos, all of these things.
So it's pretty involved. And one of the challenges when we started the team was making those accounts
with certain landfills around the state of California that were on board that, hey, you know,
any time, we can't tell you when we're going to raid, but have your landfill ready because we might
be bringing you a whole lot of weed that's got to get destroyed and buried. And these organizations
have been really good. They get it. And the other thing is, like I said, we're allied with legitimate
cannabis. And legitimate cannabis, the guys and gals that are trying to do it right, that are being
pushed out of business by these cartels because the black market is undermining them and
they're all going under. Right. If you don't pay for your water and you don't pay for your land,
you can undercut on price probably pretty easily from the guy who has to pay for certifications
and everything. Huge. Right. And imagine how saturated the black market for cannabis is in
California right now, driving the legal market price down, saturating the market, and just
incentivizing more interstate, transport to other states where it's illegal, which now becomes
a smuggling trafficking operation for illegal weed. So there's a lot of messy problems with regulation
in general. And something I always talk about when I speak to this, and I'm glad we brought
it up randomly right now, is, like I said, in Hidmore, if you're going to regulate cannabis,
It doesn't matter where you sit on legal cannabis, illegal, just regulate it right.
Regulate it in such a way that people doing it by the numbers are making sure they get an organic, pure product to legal consumers that are now legally allowed to use cannabis.
And we're at, what, 45 plus million Americans or regular repeat cannabis users, you know, deal with that.
Make sure that cannabis is quality, man.
Make sure it's coming from a good source.
Make sure it's coming from a legitimate market.
Don't mix in this toxicly tammacy.
very potent, very accessible, cartel weed that's all over the country into that equation.
And that's when I talk about when I start to get a little bit political on policy,
that's where things like Prop 64, the structure needs to change.
If we're looking at national legalization because this question comes up all the time,
you've got to make sure you go after illegal cannabis with felony statutes because you're always going to have water loss.
You're always going to have environmental destruction.
You get a lot of violence, a lot of human trafficking, a lot of ban poisons.
We saw that on all the private land grows up in Siskue County when filming the Narcophonia
documentary up in Siskue County just last summer.
And Jordan, I was blown away.
And that's kind of what got you and I connected was one of our listeners and followers
going, dude, you got to talk about this.
I think Jordan would love this story.
Yeah.
And it's what it kind of evolved into, you know?
Now you got the Asian cartels coming from back east, the mongs and the Chinese, and the Mexican
cartels all over NorCal and literally coming into counties where.
They are so remote.
They have so little law enforcement presence.
But the sad part about that situation of these remote counties is they have the best water resources left, like Mount Shasta, right?
13 plus thousand feet, seventh natural mountain wonder of the world, Mount Shasta with all that glacier white water we see every year.
That's pristine as it gets for Siskue County and all of that water is being stolen, illegal wells, water truck stealing city water in the middle of the night, ranchers, farmers being threatened a gun.
point to say, hey, your water table's going to drop, you may run out of water, don't make a
problem, and you'll survive.
Wow.
Literally having cartels taking over Sisku County, trying to actually manipulate politics
in a way, and people that have been there for 100 years, ranchers, farmers, true Americans,
you know, families said, I'm out.
I'm moving to Washington.
I'm going to Alaska, man.
I'm surrounded by cartel growers.
I hear gunfire at night.
I got dogs fighting.
I got dogs that are all cut up and animal abuse by the neighbor's dog that's supposed to be
a guard dog for this cartel.
grow house and all of these grows, but they're not deep in the forest. They're in a very remote area
you can get to on a road, but they're next to a house, and they're a big hoop house with big plastic
lined tops, you know, white, and what we noticed, which I wasn't even privy to, I'd been
on operations for about three and a half years at that point, and now I'm going back in with
Ciskew County sheriffs I worked with previously and watching what they're up against as we're doing
that documentary and blown away that all those same toxic poisons I'm talking about.
talking about that the Mexican cartels using the outdoor deep woods are on a majority of
these plants, adhesive spray glue, other pesticides and tactics, carbopherion, just a malt off
a junk, and it's sprayed all over these plants to go to the ultimate consumer on the black
market, but it's not in the open air where it's still so deadly. It's in a tarped in like hoop house.
And until we could ventilate that and open it up, you can't even go in that thing, man,
without being completely asphyxed aided on the poison.
Crazy. It was even more concentrated, more of a problem, but that just comes down to taking what we've learned and applying it to sensible regulations and trying to keep political gain and financial gain out of it. Because I've always said when politics are about personal gain or they're about some sort of revenue generation, public safety, and wildlife resources are going to suffer. And top 64 epitomizes that problem. And that is the big debate in our state of government.
California that you and I spend a lot of time in.
This is the Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, Lieutenant John Norris.
We'll be right back.
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Thank you so much for supporting those who support us. Now for the rest of my conversation with Lieutenant John Norris.
I would have thought that legalizing marijuana would change the equation here for the better, but it seems like then you just have lighter penalties and you also have the fact that you can always undercut legitimate operations by doing something illegally, except the market is
bigger and you can hide your stuff. So that definitely makes sense that that's a problem.
Actually, a long time ago, or a year or two ago, we had somebody right into Feedback Friday,
which is our advice segment on the show. And they said they rented a house that was sort of remote.
It was a farmhouse. They rented it to somebody. And that person illegally subletted that house
to these growers. I can't remember why the landlord or the renter actually showed up. And he's like,
these guys were like, get out of here. And he's like, this is my place. There were locks that were
changed, he just saw that there was a marijuana grow, and he called the guy he rented to,
and the guy was like, I don't know, I just sublet it to these guys on the internet illegal.
What happened?
Yeah.
And what happened?
Which now I think that guy was probably just a cutout for the cartel renting for them on their behalf.
Yeah.
But he was like, what do I do?
And we're like, don't go back there.
You know, because he's like, I'm going to go back there and tell these guys to get out.
I'm like, you don't know who you're dealing with, man.
These guys, if they have a million dollars worth a weed or whatever, how much are these grows
worth, actually. I don't even know. What are 7,000 marijuana plants valued at? Wow, man. Right now,
in the legal market, the price per pound, I think, is like $300. It's ridiculously low for
tier one cannabis, right? Which I'm going to get into why that's so bad for the legit cannabis
industry and some examples working with some very legal, very conservation, water conservation-oriented
growers that we just interviewed for our next film project. But basically, I know that the Asian
cartel cells have such a distribution route, and they keep a high profit margin going, because
most of their stuff is going to the Midwest and the Eastern Seaboard from Sisku County.
And we were watching that plain close of the U-Haul trucks leaving and heading east like
every hour.
A U-Haul truck was without having any pressure put on it, just taking this stuff back east
to be sold, and they're still getting over $1,000 a pound, probably more, actually,
for high-tah-c content, but again, not dispensary weed, not.
not organic, probably has a bunch of this crap on it. But because the black market's thriving so much
at $1,200, maybe $2,000 a pound for the black market weed on a good day, what are our legal
growers doing at the dispensary level? They're having to get so low on their price that they're
able to sell this stuff. And then they look at their overhead and all the oversight and all the
taxation and inspections and permits needed that so many good growers are leaving the industry.
They're just going away. And we interviewed.
two growers back in the days way before Prop 64. They were organically pure. They weren't poisoning
anybody, but they were black market farmers. They just ran the black market. That's how they made
their living. You know, they did it illegally, but they weren't hurting anybody directly from that.
They weren't violent. They weren't staling a bunch of water. They weren't using poisons and they
definitely weren't cartel. Now they go to get regulated like, okay, I'm going to give this Prop 64
chance. And we filmed and interviewed up in Lake County, a multi-million dollar cannabis farm that
looked like the best citrus farm I'd ever seen or the best Christmas tree farm. It was fenced.
It had the California Department of Fish and Wildlife inspection, you know, posters on it.
The water from their own wells was being uber conserved. I mean, it was just the conservation
on it Jordan was crazy. I was listening to these growers talk to me about
the five gallon per plant per day figure that I put out there. And they're both telling me the
gals are going, oh, no, that's totally accurate. That's an average. If you got an illegal group that
doesn't care about water conservation on a hot day in Mendo County or in Lake County, they can burn
12 gallons per plant per day to get to harvest. They said, we're getting it down to like two
gallons or less a day. And I said, how is that even possible? And they were actually taking
tree branches and other substrate and burying it under the ground of their farm.
that would hold the water like a sponge, so they would water very limited through the drought situation
and get still very good dispensary-level cannabis.
I mean, award-winning cannabis, like the Emerald Cup, actually, where these farms are producing,
and they were using a fraction of the water.
And they're authorized to use as much water as they need within what their wells can do.
But even being unconscious of just not wanting to take too much water, they were going to the next level.
We highlight that, and we're going to talk about that.
You're going to see those interviews in the call sign Trailblazer documentary.
and post-production right now.
But that was encouraging to see people like that completely put off by these cartel groups,
disgusted by it, not just talking the talk, but walking the walk.
And the sad part is because these people haven't been paid by their distributors for like two or three years.
And one gal is owed like $600,000 of basically revenue that she hasn't been paid for.
There's no enforcement right now or enough with Department of Cannabis Control in California to recover that money.
she and her husband are leaving the business this year.
And if you're going to regulate cannabis and you're going to do it right,
those are the people you want to do it and they're getting run out.
So cartels are sitting back going, hey, man, this is great.
Hey, don't change that law.
We like that misdemeanor.
And we like a kind of a chaotic situation on how these good growers are going to get paid.
So when you muddle deeper into the politics and the policy and really the abuses within a system
that's still kind of new, we've only been at it like five and a half years in California.
I mean, we're the weed state of the country, brother.
We're one of six Mediterranean climates.
We're known for wine, vineyards, the Napa Valley wine.
Well, we're the same way with cannabis, man.
We're the cannabis state of the world.
Haven't done so much work in that area environmentally, man.
I'd like to see us be exemplary in the world and not be the poor example that we are.
And I hope we're just learning nationally from these mistakes.
I want to go back to some of the tactical stuff that you mentioned in the book.
You mentioned doing a longer hike to get to a grow area rather than going in from a shorter distance.
Why do you do that? I mean, I know it's a good workout, but what else? Why start from further away when you're going to raid a grow site?
Yeah, a lot of it comes into stocking and stealth tactics to be effective at catching people. A lot of these grow sites are set up in such a way that if you come in really close, you're going to make a lot of noise, no matter what you do. And some of these grows might be way into a national forest, way into a wilderness area. And we've had those where we've hiked like eight miles one day and then set up on a ridge.
not too far from the growth site, so we can move again, you know, in a time frame, I won't say exactly how,
but we're going to basically be where we need to be silently that when these guys are moving around,
we can apprehend them as safely as possible, where we're not going to make a bunch of noise
and go through one of their trip wires, one of their pungy pits, or what they do is they cut down
a bunch of manzanita branches and put fishing line out with empty cans with rocks in them.
And now that blocks their trail, and they have hidden little trails that they got to
move all these little noisemakers, and we run into that, and we've got a certain number of operators
and a dog, or several dogs, and now we've got to move through that and stop the team. And you know what?
Being a still target is a very scary proposition. We kind of have a saying on the team,
stillness is death. You want to be really hidden or you want to be on the move when you need
to be on the move. So sometimes we'll come in from a very far distance so we can get set up
appropriately and then deal with those little traps I talked about at a good convenient time. So
When it comes to raid moment, nothing's holding us up.
Because if we get hung up on a trail and that guy's got a gun or there's a pungy pit there
and our dog can't get to where our dog needs to get to or I can't cover with a rifle
or my guys can't or whatever the case may be, that could be a really bad day for all of us.
And we've had too much gunplay to even take the chance.
And one thing that was cool about when the marijuana enforcement team was greenlit,
the whole hidden war period, is that that's all we had to do.
So it wasn't like we had to go to fishing patrol.
I didn't have to teach a hunter education class, you know, that night.
I didn't have to go to a water district meeting. I'm strictly operating on this unit statewide,
no boundaries. And, you know, we'd be on the road sometimes six, seven days a week and work
through weekends if we were on a particular operation that demanded that level of attention.
And we'll take the time we need to do it safely. And that's the only way you can do it safely,
is not rushing things and having the drop when you need to. Yeah, I remember you said you take boats or
even kayaks in because those are quiet and you're listening and looking around. I mean,
it really does sound like jungle warfare. You're just,
in there for, like you said, several days. And I would imagine if these guys are there for months,
they're attuned to all the animals and the wildlife and if it's too quiet or whatever. So you
kind of have to get that same advantage and you can't get that in an afternoon. That is spot on,
man. California is so diverse in terrain. And we have seen gross sites literally in eyesight of
the waters crashing on the Pacific Ocean on the Big Surk coastline. And then we've seen gross sites
at 11,000, 12,000 feet just below Mount Whitney, where glacier water is being diverted by black
polypipe. And we're hiking with the endangered threatened big horn sheep as we're going into a
gross site. I mean, just some of the most beautiful country you'd see, not just in California
brother, but like all over the nation, the world. Redwoods up north, the redwood forest,
the dry hot deserts down in Southern California, Riverside where I'm from, San Bernardino,
North L.A. County. All of those areas have plenty of cartel cannabis going on.
either in hoop houses or in the outdoors.
And yeah, we've had to do everything.
We've had to come in on helicopters, a lot on foot.
You know, we use ATVs where we need to.
We've had to go in on horseback before.
One of the coolest trainings, I think,
I ever got to coordinate and be part of
with the unit before I retired was Wilderness Horse Patrol.
Some of us have grown up on horses like myself
and some even better riders that were on the team.
And some of our guys and gals are like,
oh, man, I think I rode one of a pumpkin patch once for five bucks.
know when I was a kid, right? And now here we are, you know, going through a whole day or two
on saddles and tack and how to prep this horse and then taking them into wilderness areas
in steep terrain, switchbacks, cliff country, with kit gear on, with overnight gear, to actually
go get close enough and execute a raid on a horse because you can't have a motorized vehicle
in wilderness areas. So we can't take a helicopter. We can't take an ATV or motorcycle. The
electric machines, like the bikes and stuff, just don't quite have what we need them to do.
So we've done it all. And I got to say that was one of the, I think, most rewarding parts about
the job. Because I come from the Silicon Valley originally, but I grew up around still the
iconic cattle ranchers, true cowboy families that are here in the Silicon Valley foothills today.
And people think of the Silicon Valley where you hire at and they're like, what? There's cattle
ranches and brandings. And, you know, it was that you don't have Yellowstone, the show happening
in Silicon Valley. And you know what we do.
I was on a cattle branding yesterday right before the rain hit with rancher friends of mine helping out that have had grows on their property before.
They've had hunter trespass.
They've had all kinds of poaching animals, mountain lions depredating their livestock.
I mean, that's the type of stuff we get to do that makes that community connection so cool.
And being a lover of all things outdoors, I'm just glad that the contradiction of the tech capital of the world and some of the finest cattle families in the tech capital foothills, coexisting and still keeping that trend going.
Man, it's just magical. And those are the folks that see us on horses and go, okay, you know, you guys just aren't on the steel horses coming out of the big helicopters. You can actually ride a horse. I'll give you some respect for that. And we can go in a little quieter. So, yeah, we pretty much done it all. You know, California's a great state, man. I think I'm preaching to the choir here. I definitely have a concern with the politics and the safety issues going on and things I don't think are being done right. But the people and the diversity and the wildlife resources and what we have coast to coast, border to border is unmatched.
by any other state. This is a beautiful freaking state, and I still love being here and
represent for our people. And I hope someday, somehow, it just gets better and we get to turn
things around. How many people are involved in these grows? Do you have an estimation of how
many people are coming up from the cartels to run these trespass grows? And are they all illegal,
or are people from all over doing this? Generally speaking, they are illegal. Generally speaking,
a good percentage of them are what are called deportable felons. They basically qualify because
of criminal activity that they've either been involved in, maybe not convicted or accused of, you don't know.
Whether it's narcotics trafficking, gun running, sexual assault, aggravated assault, whatever.
Most of the cartel gunmen we run into, actually all of them, of the ones we have run into, and a majority of the growers have that criminal background.
And they're not citizens of the U.S. They're basically here illegally.
And certainly before the very lax opening of the borders, if you will, the end of Title 42 that just recently happened.
when we did have some semblance of proactive border protection policy and trying to solid,
a solid, sensible immigration policy, it was hard then to keep these guys out of the country.
I mean, when we debrief that meth cooker I talked about that also oversaw 50 grows, we talked about
that issue.
I said, you know, we have actually caught a grower that was a gunman, pulled a gun, maybe got
bit by one of our dogs, had tons of aggregated felonies, ICE, and CBP handled that.
he was a deportable felon. He got deported. And a week later, another one of our teams found this guy
in a grow again. And I'm not kidding you, we had the same repeat offender that had murder wraps,
highly violent. I can't even remember how many times, but it was over double digits. This guy was
back in California in a year's time and different dogs from different teams. And now we're all
comparing notes like, and this guy laughed during the interview and he goes, look, man, that thing you
call the border between Southern California, San Diego County, we call it.
all that a road bump. You know, we consider California, Mexico North. We never lost it. So I'm going to make
multiple hundreds of millions of dollars on my 50 cannabis markets I'm doing this year as an example.
I'm going to make so many hundreds of millions of dollars on that that the $4 to $7,000 it's going to cost me
to have one of my cartel guys on the border, get this guy back across right after he's deported.
It's a drop in the bucket. It's a time inconvenience. We've seen him back within 48 hours,
72 hours. Just crazy, man. That is crazy. Just crazy. That's terrible. It is horrible. And the sad part
about it is being a California native most of my life. You know, it's sometimes ignorance is bliss,
right? And when I started to realize how many cartel guys are embedded in California doing all of
these crimes, not just the cannabis, you know, I think on a rough conservative estimate, if you look at
two growers per grow cartel-related and you look at four or five thousand grow sites,
back around the time when we had that many grow sites, say, in Cali, just for illegal weed cannabis,
you're looking at least 10,000 cartel members.
Jeez.
Just for a very conservative estimate of outdoor growers.
But now, Jordan, with it not being the outdoor trespass grows so much, but now the indoor grows
that are incentivized inside these hoop houses.
And when you add the Asian contingent now of cartel members, the Mexican cartel members,
you add in the ones that aren't growing weed that are doing fentanyl production, distribution,
meth, human trafficking. I mean, we're not in the 10,000 number range. We're in the 100,000
member range, realistically, if you just do basic math. And the idea of thinking that they're just
coming across doing their business going back is a misnomer. They are embedded. They are comfortable
and under the current administration operating with impunity and getting very bold, especially
in our southwest border, as we just saw, what, last week, you know, the four folks that went
down South to do that medical procedure, got abducted to or killed. That's a hot button item.
Some of the Instagram reels going around with Sicario Gunman in an escalade and a BMG,
Barrett 50 caliber heavy gun and an AK going right down through Phoenix, Arizona. And there's
a police department substation to the right. And they're just laughing as their music continues
to play and putting that anonymously on Instagram and saying, we're here. No one's stopping us.
That's crazy.
It is crazy.
And, you know, I think one of the coolest things about going to talk about it with you is,
one, your listeners will know and viewers will know a little bit more about what's really going on,
and that even though they may not be affected by it, there's no way this isn't affecting us as a country, as a community.
When you look at fentanyl, you look at human trafficking with the children and everything else,
and the fact that we have to have some situational awareness, even in the affluent Silicon Valley,
because I know what's lurking here.
And I know it's lurking in rural Montana where I'm a full-time resident of now, especially with the meth fentanyl and the trafficking. And we just have to be aware of it. And enough people need to say we've had enough and make it a national priority to slow it down if not stop it. And it's just not right now. And the cartels are showing us that it's not.
What percentage of these guys are we catching, you think?
It would be a hard guess, bud, but I would say optimistically 10%. Oh, man.
I think that's me being in a good mood today, man, because it's Friday.
I'm having a great conversation together.
It's a lot less than that.
I just look at the number of arrests you see and the number of people we actually take down,
but you look at just the sheer statistics of the number of people that have to be here to do in the operation
and that are very good at it and just don't get caught unless they sometimes do something really dumb.
It's not many.
It's a very, very small percentage.
I'd say under 10%.
Jeez.
That's really, really crappy.
That sucks.
And it seems hopeless because even when you catch them, they turn around and come back three days later.
Yeah, you know, I always have a little bit of hope and a little bit optimism.
When I talk to my old teammates from Met and what they're doing and they're doing a really important job because when they hit an illegal growth site, they're basically impacting those other cartel crimes we talked about indirectly.
With public safety being at the top of the priority list.
And with the law is kind of against our mission.
Yeah.
With the incentivizing we talked about Prop 64 and all those things, I just kind of tell them and I tell other agencies that I talk to or other people I train, I go, look, look at this as a marathon.
not a sprint, look at it as a long-term war that is really a hidden war.
And name the book that for no reason.
I mean, it really is a truly hidden war.
We wouldn't have this magnitude of problem if it was a little more overt and a national
priority.
But the thing I tell the guys is, hey, man, if you get one illegal hoop house taken out
and that product never makes it to the market to poison some high schooler that's
trying cannabis for the first time that has a big football scholarship or she's a valedictorian
or something, right?
and you stop that water from being stolen and you saved, I don't know,
four million gallons of underground water in California's worst drought,
even if you make no arrests and you know they're going to go do it 50 other places,
you still made a little bit of a dent on that one side.
So it's like an NFL chunk play, man.
You're not going to get the vertical 70-yard freaking wide receiver into the end zone,
but you're going to get a ground and pound three-yard victory every time you take one of those raids out
and you keep a dent.
And I got to tell you, as stacked as the politics are against my team,
and my old agency doing the job they're doing, I just admire and respect and those are my heroes
because it's gotten a lot worse since I left agency, you know, pushing three, four, five years now
and they just stay in the fight, you know. And what's really going to help is awareness of people saying,
hey, it's not just game wardens, not just DEA or sheriffs. It's all of our LEOs, all of our first
law enforcement officers, our first responders that are dealing with this cartel threat on some level.
They may not be in the woods doing the game warden sheriff thing, but they're surely going to
experience of fentanyl interdiction or a crisis or no somebody that died in the family. And I now
have friends and family members of friends right here in the Silicon Valley that have taken a dirty
pill from a fentanyl bottle that looked like an oxycodine. And she was slated. She had a great
scholarship, valedictorian, doing a bunch of sports, star volleyball player, a lot of inner knee
soreness and took a pill from a friend for pain relief, not even to like get high at a party
and didn't wake up to go to school the next day. Oh my God. That's awful. Right here in, you know,
the Los Altos area of Silicon Valley. And a friend told me that story just a couple months ago.
And she was related to that young lady. And man, if that doesn't make it any more personal,
I don't know what it is. And that's why every little bit our guys are doing out there and every
little bit the public that are watching this podcast or watching any of these documentaries,
just go, okay, this is bullshit. I got to learn more about it. And next time policy comes up like a
Prop 64, I need to read the fine print. Because Jordan, ironically, one of my jobs as a lieutenant team
leader of met was 30% of that was outreach and education. So the PowerPoint road show, speaking at
conferences, but it's talking to lobbyists, legislature groups under the previous governor,
before we regulated especially, and telling them the story and showing them the graphic pictures,
I said, look, we know regulation is coming. We know it can be done right. Just if you regulate,
please keep the bite against the cartels or trespass growers or illegal growers. Keep a deterrence factor
in there, keep the felony, keep aggravated charges and penalties for water stealing. And it was,
yeah, yeah, yeah, we got to do that, man. Thanks for all you're doing. Yeah, that's horrible. We have
that happening in the state. And then when it passed and I saw the language, I just, I can't tell you
how shell-shocked I was, man. I was like, what just happened? So we watered it down to a misdemeanor
and an infraction for juveniles to get it to pass. Was this just something someone needed for the
revenue or the taxation they thought. Crazy. Because there wasn't any logical reason to do it
unless it was financially based and it was vote based just to get cannabis passed. And it can be
done so well. And there are some underground movements. There have been some bills recently
proposed that will, I don't think we'll see the light of day currently in California, but basically
to repeal and amend Prop 64. Sure. I mean, look, pain pills are legal, but I can't produce them at
home and then not get in trouble for it. So what the hell? I mean, this should be regulated like the
drug that it is. And look, I'm sympathetic if somebody is like, look, I grow my own wheat. I got five
plants in the backyard, 10 or 40, whatever it is. It's on my property. Fine. Whatever. But what
you have 7,000? It's kind of hard to argue like, hey, man, it's just a hobby. Look, I broke into this
guy's land and I set up a giant farm illegally in the middle of a nationally protected forest. But it's just,
it's kind of a little side hustle that I got going. Come on. Yeah. Makes no sense.
I think you hit it on the head. This isn't just the Cheech and Chong days of a couple of hippies in Humboldt County, you know, that are growing for a little personal consumption. Maybe they're going to trade it, make a couple bucks at the farmer's market. We're way past that. We are way past that. And it's not going to fix overnight. But you can kind of arm people doing what I used to do. And the women and the men that are the real heroes of the day under very tough laws right now, continuing to do it. Give them a better tool belt with a better law to enforce and see.
legitimate cannabis thrive and actually have these cannabis farmers like the two gals I just mentioned
that we're going to feature, have them celebrated for doing it by the numbers and taking the good
steps to come out of the dark when they could have made a bunch of money on the black market
that was completely cash, that was never going to be taxed, they were never going to need to
spend $80,000 on 10 different permits from agencies to have a legal growing farm. But they elected
to do that just to try to do it right. And you know what? You look at that and you ask them,
wow, how's that going? And I'm like, can I honestly say that I recommend you go legal as a law enforcement
officer that enforced marijuana for the latter half of my career? I can't ethically tell them that's a good
idea because it's not. And they're finding that out on their own. And that's why things like laws
have to change. So we can get more legitimate cannabis working in California as it needs to and be a
better example because other states are regulating. My new home state of Montana's got some
recreational legislation coming and going. They're dabbling and doing, they've just made some changes.
A lot of states are doing it, but not everybody's doing it well. We got to look big picture.
There's too many lives at risk. And you said it, the 7,000 plants or these manufacturing,
these dirty pills, come on. This is home-based stuff.
Thanks for coming on the show, man. I guarantee you most people have never heard of this,
and I'm glad we're able to bring awareness to the issue. It's creepy that there's drug cartel
operations and the scale of environmental damage just kind of literally right in our backyard.
Yeah, man, it's great to finally connect with you.
I've been following your stuff, man.
Keep it up.
Thanks a bunch, and thanks for helping promoting just kind of what we're doing.
I do want to let people know that if people want more information on this,
they want any speaking done on it.
I speak all over the country to this.
I educate.
Just go to johnnors.com.
It's J-O-H-N-O-R-E-S.
You can get to my email for any questions related to this subject
or even people wanting to go into conservation law enforcement and be a game word.
I can't tell you how many hundreds, if not thousands of young folks,
and older folks that are coming over to this profession and wanting to do it. And I know you've got a copy, but if I could just throw it out there, the second printing, second edition of Hidden War just dropped. You got one of the first copies. I did, yeah. And it's got updated information in it to take us into some of what we discussed. It's on Amazon and print copy, Kendall, Audible. And if you want a personalized copy, hit me up through my email and I do a lot of those orders. And everyone that's getting into the book and getting into the story are helping become part of that thin green line. And that's what we're
going to need. I can't thank you enough, man. Thank you very much. You're about to hear a preview
of the Jordan Harbinger show with a former DEA agents that brought down Colombian drug kingpin
Pablo Escobar. If you've watched the TV show Narcos, these are the real life Steve Murphy
and Javier Peña. The whole war of Pablo Escobar is based on the extradition. Columbia wanted to
extradite him, and that's when he started the war. Columbia backed down on the extradition.
So for me, personally, I always thought Pablo would never be taken a life.
Here's a guy that's responsible for we estimate 10, 15, maybe 20,000 murders.
Bombing of a commercial airline, killing of a presidential candidate,
putting a bomb at the newspaper editor because they wrote a bad story on him.
It's outrageous.
Innocent people getting killed every day.
You know, car bombs 10 to 15 on a daily basis.
Yeah, that was his war on Columbia, and it was just all innocent people being at the wrong place at the wrong time.
They made it clear to us. This is all about killing Pablo Escobar.
And the real heroes in the search of Pablo Escobar were the Colombian National Police.
They're the ones who took down Eskabar.
Absolutely. People are still out there that think Pablo Escobar is some kind of hero.
But they have no idea what they're talking about when they're talking about, you know, he's a hero.
Oh, he did this for his community.
didn't do anything. He killed people. What he was, in reality, was a manipulator. He was a master
manipulator. We understand that we as a world cannot arrest our way out of the drug problem.
We cannot put enough people in jail to stop it because there's so many evil people out there
waiting to take advantage of you and us. They'll do anything to make money and take advantage
of others. To hear what it was like to chase the slippery drug kingpin responsible for thousands
of deaths, check out episode 453 of the Jordan Harbinger Show.
A little bit depressing, a little bit scary.
He's arrested over 1,000 people, all from GrowOps.
I'm sure that number is, that's just him, not the whole unit.
And the unit's been going for a while since he's been retired.
When they find these areas, not only are they full of garbage, poisons, plastic, trash, human excrement, they find shrines and Santamwerite icons.
And if you haven't been watching narcos or Dexter or whatever, those are very common among narco-traffickers.
basically patron saints of death, and they require kind of gross diabolical stuff to stay in their good graces.
It's this weird mixture of Catholicism and paganism and witchcraft and all this kooky stuff.
It's really interesting.
We talked about it a little bit with Ed Calderon on episode 500.
And John told me that he can actually tell which cartel is doing the grow by the candles and the icons that they're using.
So these saints, the so-called saints of death, they require torture, they require killing, they
require other brutal acts as tribute. So if you're wondering one of the reasons why there's so
many really disgusting cartel murders, this is one reason cartels do so much horrific stuff. The other
stuff is, of course, do scare their rivals and it works. The average financial value of one
grow, I look this up, it's approximately $16 million. Now, this is an average, so it varies wildly.
$16 million. That's a pretty good haul if you've got a big old grow in some rancher's
backyard, and you don't have to pay for any sort of inputs. Why?
our land. Unfortunately, a lot of our sanctuary laws here in California prevent his unit working
with ICE and immigration. So a lot of these guys, they turn right around and come straight back,
which is not the way these laws, I assume, were intended to be. Growers will often do really
clever stuff to hide their tracks going into the woods. John told me they find these boots that
have felt on the bottom or stilts that look like cow hooves. So they will walk into the site on what
looks like cow hooves. So if people are tracking them, they're like, oh, well, that's not a person.
it's a cow, and they'll just let the trail go. It's pretty damn creative. I have to hand it to them.
I assume they found out about that because they found cow hoof stilts when they did a raid. I really
don't know. I would imagine those were an interesting souvenir. Now, what you're thinking is,
oh my gosh, if I live in California, I got to wear Kevlar and go horseback riding or pick
berries because I'm going to get shot by growers. Don't be afraid to go hiking. These grows now,
they don't have to be too deep in the woods, so it's decreased 90%. The growers have actually
become more brazen, fortunately or unfortunately. So the likelihood of you running into that danger
out in the middle of nowhere is actually quite minimal. But here's the number to call. If you do need
to report something, whether it's poaching, a marijuana grow, anything like that, call AAA
334-2258. That's triple-8-3-34-2258 or text tip 411. That's tip 411. And you can report poachers,
growers, don't do it right, staying in there. But if you find a grow and you can take pictures
or drop a pin, get the GPS, whatever it is, fine, but do not engage the growers, obviously,
and get the hell out of there. Stay safe. And hopefully, Lieutenant John Norse unit will come and
get these guys out of there, or at least clean up the grow site. Big thank you to Lieutenant
John Norse. All things John Norse will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Our chat, GPT, bot, if you want to go give that a shot, grab anything from any show we've ever done,
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