Seven People Shot Dead At Illegal California Marijuana Operation
Seven People Shot Dead At Illegal California Marijuana Operation
Investigators are searching for multiple suspects in the fatal shooting of seven people at a large, illegal marijuana cultivation and processing site in Southern California's rural foothills, the Riverside County sheriff said on Tuesday.

LOS ANGELES: Investigators are searching for multiple suspects in the fatal shooting of seven people at a large, illegal marijuana cultivation and processing site in Southern California’s rural foothills, the Riverside County sheriff said on Tuesday.

The crime scene in the community of Aguanga, abaout 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Los Angeles, was discovered by sheriff’s deputies responding early on Monday to reported assault with a deadly weapon, Sheriff Chad Bianco said.

Six victims were found dead in and around a single dwelling on the sprawling property. A seventh victim, a woman still alive when deputies arrived about a half hour past midnight, died later at a local hospital, Bianco told a news conference.

As of Tuesday afternoon, sheriff’s detectives assisted by federal agents were still combing the site for evidence and interviewing witnesses.

“We believe at this time that there were multiple suspects,” he said.

More than 20 people lived at property, a “major organized crime-type operation” consisting of multiple homes and other buildings, including a cannabis nursery and facilities for drying and processing marijuana plants, the sheriff said.

“All of the people that were on the site, that were potential witnesses or the victims, were Laotian,” he added, without elaborating on their ethnicity or immigration status.

Investigators seized more than 1,000 pounds (450kg) of processed marijuana with a street value of $1 million to $5 million, along with a couple hundred live cannabis plants and a lab for extracting cannabis oil from them, he said.

While marijuana remains classified as an illegal narcotic under U.S. federal law, California in 2018 legalized possession and use of marijuana by adults for recreational purposes, as well as commercial cultivation and distribution by businesses specially licensed and regulated by the state.

But a marijuana black market still thrives, posing what law enforcement considers an ongoing public safety threat.

Bianco said the slayings in Aguanga marked the eighth homicide case – totaling 14 victims – related to his county’s illicit marijuana trade this year.

“Marijuana is not a victimless crime,” he said.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg in Maplewood, N.J.; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Lincoln Feast.)

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