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In its first announcement about the seizure of more than 3,000 marijuana plants from a plot in Pike National Forest, an ultra-popular place for illegal grows (more on that later), the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office estimated that the weed was worth $900,000. However, that was later altered to $9 million — which suggests that there’s been some major inflation in recent years.
In August 2009, we reported about the discovery of more than 14,000 marijuana plants in Pike — and while authorities hadn’t put a dollar amount on its worth when that post was published, 5,100 pot plants taken from Pike that July were predicted to have generated around $2.5 million.
So… 2,000 fewer plants are now worth nearly four times that much two years later? My computational skills are rusty, but that seems like a mammoth increase — especially considering that a seizure of 3,000 marijuana plants near Raymond in August 2010 was valued at $500,000. But none of the news agencies reporting about this story, including the Denver Post and the Huffington Post, have questioned the $9 million figure.
Of course, not all plants are created equal. Check out the photos provided by the DCSO below — and then you do the math.
Photos continue on next page.
See more photos like these in our slideshow “Task force finds $2.5 Million marijuana bonanza on Sugarloaf Mountain.”