Permission
is granted to copy and forward the following
article by the Pioneer Press.
Pioneer Press
Fort Jones, CA
May 26, 2004
Page 1, Column 2
Salmon
River Marijuana Growers Exposed
• Salmon River
Marijuana Growers Association: Narcotics
Trafficking Organization or Environmental Radicals?
By John Martinez
Special Opinion
Report
With contributions from Daniel Webster and Barry
Clausen
The following
special report is based on interviews and research
conducted over the course of five years. For the
safety of those we
interview, the
Pioneer Press has chosen to not
identify our sources. The
quotes within this report are from interviews of
those with intimate
knowledge of the Salmon River Marijuana Growers
Association as well as
local and federal law enforcement.
General Overview
The Salmon River
Marijuana Growers Association’s (SRMG) initial
structure and philosophy were aligned to “communal”
and anti-government
mindsets predominant within the 1960s and '70s
student and anti-war
protest movement communities.
When founded, SRMG
was allegedly marketed to local “hippies” and
leftist
separatists as a cooperative intending to mitigate
and offset plantation
losses due to theft and interdiction efforts. The
overarching goal of
the organization was to establish “expatriate
communities of leftwing
radicals” within the U.S. itself.
The antecedent
organization to the SRMG was the Salmon River
Concerned Citizens. Peter Brucker was in the center
of that group. Locals bought into the concept of
stabilizing production and mitigating plant theft
and thus political inertia was captured. The SRMG
at that time,
mid-70s, was known publicly as the “Salmon River
Concerned Citizens.”
Through the citizens group, Brucker allegedly
recruited ideological
adherents from the anti-government environmental
movement to form the
group’s leadership. The SRMG quickly grew through
the late 70s,
allegedly, due to Brucker’s charismatic and
spiritual leadership and a
budding relationship with local sheriff deputies and
Forest Service
personnel.
By the early 80s,
the SRMG was less a cooperative and more a
“clearinghouse providing protection for local
growers” in an exchange
for a percentage of gross production. By the
mid-80s, “insular
operational layers were fully integrated into the
organization’s overall
structure” thereby protecting the group’s leadership
from surveillance
and arrest.
By the late 80s, the
SRMG had consolidated its control over
the Salmon River region and was not only providing
protection, but also
controlled who grew and who did not grow within
their protective area.
In the late-80s, the ideological tenets of the group
publicly surfaced
through a group calling itself the Klamath Forest
Alliance (KFA).
Brucker and Felice Pace played key roles in founding
KFA and continue to
be involved in the process. Many KFA board members
and affiliates are
connected “to the drug trade and the radical
movements” originating in
the late 60s and early 70s.
During the past “16
years SRMG has grown into the region’s most
sophisticated and well-connected narcotics and
policy-making
organization.” SRMG is fully integrated with “large
coastal
wholesalers” and regional and “statewide protection
rackets.”
SRMG is an alleged
multi-tiered trafficking organization whereby
controlling
members of the SRMG “do not directly participate in
the day-to-day
operational” aspects of producing and distributing.
The SRMG is
effectively an “extended drug protection and
laundering
ring, a policy-consulting group creating haven-like
growing conditions
for the marijuana trade, and provides ‘legitimate’
employment and
‘volunteer’ opportunities that mask the movement of
drug-related
personnel” in and out of the Salmon River corridor.
SRMG members control
a non-profit corporation, Salmon River Restoration
Council established in 1992, which allegedly enables
the group to
achieve the above operational, policy and support
functions of the
regional drug trade. The non-profit employs and
works almost
exclusively with drug users, dealers and growers
thus creating rings of
protection throughout the river corridor.
The non-profit
controlled by SRMG sub-contracts almost exclusively
with
a private corporation, owned by Jim Villaponteux,
named Salmon Mountain
Forestry. Salmon Mountain Forestry works with many
who are tied to the
drug industry “creating further safeguards.”
It is through this
company and another owned by Villaponteux that
allegedly most of the irrigation piping and supplies
are purchased for the
operation.
SRMG exerts
“tremendous influence” over the Karuk Tribe through
its
Department of Natural Resources at the expense of
the vast majority of
non-drug related Native Americans. This “influence
intentionally
extends well beyond the Aboriginal Territory of the
Karuk Indians, which is along the mid-Klamath River
area.
The Shasta Nations
are potential litigants” if it is proven that a
“narcotics-related conspiracy” exists involving
“usurpation and
intentional territorial falsification of Native
homelands.”
The situation has
the potential “to explode the myths of the Democrat
Party”
and their friends “within the environmental
community.”
“The vast majority of the Karuk Tribe are very
decent, dignified and
good people.” However, through “fear of being
victimized by violence
and withholding of financial and social services
assistance by key
tribal leaders, nobody wants to push the issues.
People get hurt down
river if they open their mouths.”
According to Native
sources, a very
serious signal was communicated by the death of a
Native American after
he communicated to state law enforcement their
concerns regarding
potential financial fraud.
The most significant
shift in the SRMG’s “operational paradigm within
the past three years” is its collaboration with
Mexican organizations
that local law enforcement recognizes as “cartel”
groups. SRMG’s
alleged networking with Mexican nationals is
reputedly a by-product of a
longstanding relationship between a newcomer to the
Salmon River and
SRMG principals.
The newcomer is
known by several names or aliases. The newcomer
purchased property located on White’s Gulch
approximately five miles
east of Sawyers Bar on the Salmon River. The
location was to provide “manicuring and meth super
lab production.” Law enforcement has “visited the
location, thus
tipping the principals to possible surveillance” and
thereby prematurely
alerting said collection of individuals. His
arrival to the Salmon
River coincides with the incidence of Mexican
nationals operating in the
SRMG protective areas.
He is known to
locals “as extremely dangerous” but “untouchable” by
local law enforcement.
Today, SRMG
represents the most influential group operating
within the
Klamath River region - more powerful than even “the
Forest Service” in
some minds. SRMG relationships range from radical
Earth First! militias
to nationally recognized political figures to Native
groups that have
publicly vowed to blow up dams on the Klamath if
they are not taken out
by the government.
Local Control
The depth, breadth
and level of influence wielded by the Salmon River
Marijuana Grower’s Association (SRMG) over Siskiyou
County is best
described by one of their own associates.
Immediately after Siskiyou County Sheriff
Rick Riggins was elected, shock waves were sent
throughout the regional
drug industry.
“These guys’ (SRMG)
worst nightmare is Riggins. The whole thing breaks
apart. The [statewide] players won’t have airtight
protection that
Riggins won’t bring in the Feds.”
Immediately after
Riggin’s successful election to Siskiyou County
Sheriff, a confidential informant stated for the
record “they are going
to ruin Riggins by taking away his money.” The
informant indicated that
both county and state interests would squeeze
Riggin’s budget to make
him look ineffective and “ruin him.”
According to a
former resident of the Salmon River with close ties
to
Peter Brucker, reputed spiritual founder of SRMG,
this “guy (Brucker)
really believes in the Mother Earth and all that
stuff. He’s heavy into
praying to the Earth.”
According to the
same informant, Felice Pace is
the one that has the top political connections to
both state and local
politicos and major “mafia players.” According to
this source, Pace
controlled the past Sheriff Charlie Byrd and
currently calls the shots
at the DA’s office.
“They don’t touch
Felice if they know what’s good
for them. They [SRMG] are using the pot trade to
structure and finance
movements. These guys are powerful. These guys are
using their cash to
influence [policy] and buy off people. They got
people on the payroll
and big players make sure they don’t get pinched.”
According to
informants, countless complaints and drug-related
tips have
been given to the sheriff’s department over the
years and nothing has
happened to SRMG principals David Jacques, Peter
Brucker, Jim
Villaponteux and Les Harling.
In the 2002 grow
season very specific tips were provided to both the
California Highway Patrol Northern Division and the
Siskiyou County
Sheriff Department regarding a large grow in the
Salmon Mountains
located on the Blue Ridge between the Godfrey and
Blue Ridge Ranches.
The grow was roughly 7,500 plants, as discovered by
the sheriff
department.
“What concerns the
law enforcement community is surveillance was not
established [on the grow]. The local jurisdiction
has used cameras and
human surveillance on much smaller items. There
were months to
prepare.” The large grow, according to a source
located in Arcata, was
allegedly the work of the owners of the two ranches
where the grow was
found, Peter Brucker and David Jacques. The evening
the plants were
“eradicated” by the sheriff department an eyewitness
claims that a
moving van loaded with “pot took off from the
Godfrey and went on down
river to get cleaned (manicured) on the coast.”
The grow was
reported to CHP representatives early in June in
2002.
Shortly thereafter, informants underwent harassment
and intimidation by
law enforcement representatives. The events that
transpired after the
grow was relayed to the CHP “may take down top
players within the
state.”
Things may be
changing however under a new leadership.
“Last year (grow
season 2003) they got hit hard. This mother
(Riggins)
ain’t playin’ no games.”
After one midnight
in 2003, the morning prior to a large raid in
Sawyers
Bar, the
Pioneer Press and an independent
journalist observed Felice
Pace returning from the Salmon River over the top of
Etna Summit.
Sources close to the Salmon River have “no doubt he
was tipping them” of
the impending raid.
A Bigger Picture
The influence “Pace
and his friends have at their disposal is
astonishing.”
When leadership in
the Karuk Tribe began “to lean away” from SRMG,
Pace’s friends allegedly “called in a heavy hitter”
to work for the
Tribe.
According to
sources, the “heavy hitter” was a Democrat activist
from the San Francisco Bay Area named Lori Brown.
According to high
level sources within San Francisco’s business
community, Lori Brown “is
closely affiliated with leading Bay Area Democrats”
that have “very
untidy and soiled laundry to hide from public view.”
Brown was an
activist for the 2000 Gore campaign and whose ties
are
“close to Willie Brown and who runs with Barbara
Boxer’s people.”
Ms. Brown’s alleged
role was to “take out” the emerging anti-drug and
financial accountability movement within the Karuk
Tribe. One must
wonder why such a high level and connected Democrat
would allegedly want to counter anti-drug and
financial accountability leadership in a Tribe.
The CHP “has caught
their tail feathers in this trap” by allowing
“blatant violations to occur to private citizens.”
The “rank and file
have little if any idea” as to the role “some within
leadership” are
playing to “hide abuse and failing to uphold the
public trust.” Law
enforcement in the state is “sorely in need of clean
leadership starting
from the top.”
The Northern
Division of the California Highway Patrol is a
“prime
objective for organized crime. The geographic
overlay of the Division
(Northern Division) correlates to very critical
narcotics sources. If
your hypothesis is on the money, and it looks that
way, and radical
groups including gangs are being fed by these
sources (narcotics) we
should step up federal law enforcement involvement.”
Sources both in law
enforcement and at the political level agreed that
“exposing [SRMG] and the [Karuk Tribe] would lead
right up to the
Democrat Statehouse.”
According to Bay
Area sources, the late, former Sheriff Byrd was too
closely connected to Willie “Brown for the health of
major Democrats.”
Byrd’s tremendous
popularity is a concern for those who have studied
that part of the state. “His support by local
leaders is suspicious and
his support by leading political figures is
sobering.”
According to
sources, Byrd’s statements given in a civil case
tipped the
scales against Byrd and his protection was
stripped.
Riggins, as sheriff,
represents “a significant departure from past
political
entanglements and will undoubtedly frustrate major
players.”
Highly connected
Democrats have “without concern for the law, swept
massive political and drug corruption in Siskiyou
County under the
carpet to protect friends.”
Regarding the
Webster Case
According to a
well-placed retired federal law enforcement
intelligence
source, “[Daniel] Webster is the tip of an iceberg.
The local DA is too
fearful of prosecuting a potential Pace conspiracy,
Bill [Attorney
General Lockyer] can’t disembowel his own party and
Feds are cautious to
go after only finite cases.
Given the delicate
political situation with
the mayoral race in Tijuana, there is no way the
Democrats are going to
allow [SRMG] or Pace to be touched.
Bill [Lockyer] is
safer being known
as a gay basher than risking exposing Pace and his
associates.
This thing could
easily unearth Janet Reno’s dealings in 1999 when
she went
against the intelligence community’s assessment of
major Mexican
traffickers operating from the safety of the Mexican
Federal
government.”
“[AG Prosecutor Jo]
Graves was assigned to Webster for if anything she
has too much to lose. She’s got no choices, that’s
not to say she’s
dirty. A young upstart might not be willing to
mortgage their future
over this mess or might go public. If the liberal
establishment was in
an uproar over the rumors the CIA was involved in LA
[cocaine
distribution], imagine the abandonment from the
party if they
[Democrats] are caught running pot into minority
venues.
The Democrats are
sitting on a powder keg and Webster is an unknown,
he’s the burning ember in the wind.”
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