Task Force arrests 4 in Marijuana Busts
Wednesday November 28th 2007, 9:39 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from thetimesherald.com-

By Bobby Ampezzan

The St. Clair County Sheriff’s Department Drug Task Force made four arrests in two separate drug busts from late Monday night to early Tuesday evening.

In the larger of the two seizures, several marijuana plants potentially worth more than $10,000 on the street were seized from a house in the 3800 block of West Water Road in Port Huron Township on Monday night.

The task force made the bust in Port Huron Township at about 10 p.m. A small amount of processed marijuana, drug paraphernalia and packaging material also were seized.

Officers arrested the homeowners, a 45-year-old male and a 41-year-old female, and turned a 15-year-old female over to family members.The couple face a felony charge of marijuana possession with intent to deliver, and two lesser charges of manufacturing marijuana, and maintaining a drug house.

Maintaining a drug house is a charge that is applied in cases where “we have run surveillance, have information that drug sales are going on in the house, and … find drugs,” said Lt. Ronald Muxlow, who heads up the task force.

At about 4:45 p.m. Tuesday, the task force raided a house in the 2500 block of Forest Street in Port Huron, seizing a small amount of marijuana and arresting two men, a 25-year-old Port Huron man who may face charges of possession of marijuana and maintaining a drug house, and a 23-year-old Fort Gratiot man who may face a charge of frequenting a drug house.

These are misdemeanor charges.

All four have been released pending the issuance of warrants.



Drug Bust leads to light sentence
Tuesday November 27th 2007, 11:44 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from cbs3springfield.com-

By Lesley Tanner

It’s been almost a year since Greenfield police responded to an anonymous call that a drug deal had gone bad at this property on Newell Pond Road. No one expected that tip would lead them to 500 marijuana plants, dozens of grow lights and 69 pounds of pot ready to sell.

“It took a number of days to get everything picked up, documented, secured, it was quite a task,” says Greenfield Police Captain John Newton.

Donald Hale and Alan Womer co-owned the building where police say their pot growing business had been booming for almost a decade, completely unnoticed. And despite the bust’s size and significance those responsible will barely see the inside of a jail cell.

“There is just no way of predicting an end result in any case that you have,” says Captain Newton.

After pleading guilty Hale was sentenced to one year in the House of Corrections, but will only be held for 90 days, while Womer will be out on probation for the next year. It’s a sentence investigators say does not define the quality of their work.

“Although it may be some indication of success or failure of law enforcement to do their job, or the courts, it’s not the best gauge of success of an investigation,” says Captain Newton.

Prosecutors say because the two had little to no prior records the sentence at trial would have been about the same. And so far investigators have found no evidence that the marijuana growing in Greenfield was being sold locally.



Police: Major Drug Shipment Intercepted
Tuesday November 27th 2007, 11:41 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from wcax.com-

New York State Police say they intercepted a major shipment of drugs.

Troopers noticed a suspicious woman sitting in a car at the South Bay parking area in Tupper Lake. When an officer asked Laurie Albany, 42, to roll her window down, police say they could smell a strong odor of marijuana.

They searched her car and found 150 pounds of “very potent marijuana,” according to Capt. Robert LaFountain.

LaFountain says it is “hydroponic marijuana designed to be used in the drug trade.”

The marijuana was allegedly smuggled into New York through Canada. It has a street value of more than $310,000. State Police are calling it one of their biggest busts in recent memory.



Tip-off line leads to Major Busts
Tuesday November 27th 2007, 11:39 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from iafrica.com-

Tip offs to Primedia’s Crime Line have led police to major successes in the fight against crime and drugs.

In recent weeks police closed down a drug manufacturing plant in Sandton while in the Western Cape police arrested eight people and seized drugs worth thousands of rands following a series of raids. Police acted on tip-offs to the 32211 SMS number from members of the community. On Wednesday 7 November 2007, police closed down a drug manufacturing plant in Sandton after receiving an SMS tip-off through Crime Line. Three men, aged 23, 27 and 28 years, were arrested and drugs valued at R50 000 were seized. The drugs confiscated included 15 grams of ecstasy, 74 grams of CAT and 49 grams of cocaine. “Investigations are still ongoing,” said police Director Sally de Beer. Over the past month, 21 individuals have been arrested in Gauteng and the Western Cape as a result of tip-offs to Crime Line. This brings the total number of arrests since June 2007 to 274 and the total amount of goods confiscated to R17- million. Two cases of contravening the copyright act were registered in Gauteng. During these police raids, three men were arrested and R25 000 worth of fake DVDs and electronic equipment were seized. Also in Gauteng, one anonymous SMS reported that a vehicle had been abandoned at a block of flats. Upon investigation, police found the vehicle, worth R325 000 and established that it had, in fact, been reported stolen and that the registration number had been changed. “The South African Police Service thanks the members of the community who submitted the tips that led to these arrests. Each and every criminal that is taken off our streets is a victory for the honest and law abiding members of our community,” said De Beer.



Witnesses in Drug Bust did chores for a fix
Sunday November 25th 2007, 3:17 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from eveningsun.com-

By Shari Sanger

One man told a statewide investigating grand jury he began to forge checks so he could maintain his OxyContin addiction.

Another said he began to deliver pills to other users in exchange for free pills.

The two men, now in their 20s, are among several witnesses who testified to a grand jury about how as teenagers they began committing crimes to pay for prescription pills they obtained from Joyce and Randy Knox - the couple law enforcement officials say operated a prescription-drug ring in Adams County.

According to the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office, the witnesses - who ranged in age from 13 to 19 when they allegedly bought the drugs from the Knoxes - testified that they paid the Knoxes for the controlled substances in various ways, including gift cards at retail stores, doing chores such as mowing the lawn, trading tools, DVD players and game machines, forging checks and committing robberies.

Attorney General Tom Corbett said he suspects some of the gift cards that were given to the Knoxes in exchange for the drugs were stolen from stores.

“This investigation is an illustration that kids are going to do what they have to, and if there is an addiction at that early age, they’re going to do what they have to to obtain the drugs with no regards to consequences,” Adams County District Attorney Shawn Wagner said.

The Knoxes, who lived at 361-B Shippensburg Road in Biglerville, were identified as sources in the county for the prescription painkillers OxyContin, Percocet, Xanax and hydrocodone, as well as marijuana, authorities said.

Their arrests, as well as the arrests of five others - all of whom knew the Knoxes and were obtaining and distributing prescription drugs - were announced at a press conference Monday.

How exactly the drugs were obtained is part of a continuing investigation, authorities said.

The attorney general said there is no way to know just how many kids were allegedly victimized by the prescription drug ring.

But Wagner said the young age of the known victims shows the problem locally with prescription-drug abuse and related crimes needs to be taken seriously.

“Unfortunately, in our juvenile system, now we’re seeing that juveniles are possessing these prescription drugs. Sometimes they’re easier to get than cocaine or marijuana,” Wagner said.

Many of those who offered testimony against the former Biglerville couple said they either lived in or knew someone else who lived in apartments formerly owned by the Knoxes.

* One man, now 22, testified he quit high school when he was 15 or 16 and moved in with someone who rented an apartment from Joyce and Randy Knox, according to court documents.

He said he was introduced to Joyce Knox and began buying small amounts of marijuana from her. Within six months, he said, he began buying Vicodin and Xanax, and when he was 17, he started buying OxyContin from her.

He testified that when he first started using OxyContin, he would buy three to four 40-milligram pills per week. Within two years, his habit progressed to one or two 80-milligram pills per day.

He began to forge checks so he could maintain his addiction.

* Another man, now 23, told the grand jury he began buying OxyContin from Joyce Knox when he was 19. He would buy about once every other week but after about four months, he began buying and using drugs on a daily basis, according to court documents. He said he purchased quantities of OxyContin, and occasionally Xanax and marijuana.

* An 18-year-old girl said she had a severe addiction to OxyContin and would purchase from Joyce Knox daily, sometimes multiple times a day.

The girl, who was 16 at the time, entered a rehabilitation facility but relapsed after being released. She moved into an apartment at the Knox property at the beginning of the year and continued to purchase OxyContin from Joyce Knox.

* A 19-year-old girl was involved in a severe car accident and began to self-medicate with OxyContin. A friend introduced her to Joyce and Randy Knox in 2005 and after the initial introduction, the girl was able to go to the Knoxes herself to buy OxyContin, according to grand jury testimony.

Her addiction grew to the point where she was buying it daily.

* A 16-year-old testified he began buying marijuana from Joyce Knox when he was 14 and was introduced to the Knoxes by a friend who lived at the Knoxes’ apartments.

And the youngest known alleged victim, now 15, said when he was 13 he began buying marijuana from Joyce Knox after his family moved into the apartments.



Police charge man in 2,500 pound Marijuana Bust
Saturday November 24th 2007, 12:17 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from kcchronicle.com-

AURORA – Police have charged a 33-year-old man in connection with the discovery this week of 2,500 pounds of marijuana.

Fernando Velaczo-Rodriguez, who is from Guadalajara, Mexico, is being held at the Kane County Jail on $150,000 bond.

Police believe that the marijuana, bundled in 144 individually wrapped packages that then were hidden inside watermelon crates, was tied to a large drug-trafficking operation out of Mexico.

Five other men arrested Tuesday night with Velaczo-Rodriguez were released without charges.

Acting on a tip, officers Tuesday night staked out a warehouse in the 1500 block of Dearborn Street and arrested the six men as they unloaded crates from a semi-trailer.

The drugs have a street value of $2.58 million.



Man charged in Aurora Drug Bust
Friday November 23rd 2007, 9:44 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from dailyherald.com-

By Christy Gutowski

Police released the identity today of one of six men apprehended after $2.5 million worth of marijuana was seized in Aurora. Fernando Velaczo-Rodriguez, 33, of Guadalajara, Mexico, is being held on a $150,000 bond in the Kane County jail. Authorities released the other five men without charges. Police received a tip that a major drug trafficking haul would be delivered to an industrial/warehouse area in the 1500 block of Dearborn Street in Aurora. Detectives staked out the area near Farnsworth Avenue. At 8 p.m. Tuesday, the men were apprehended as they unloaded numerous crates from a truck. Police said they seized 2,580 pounds of marijuana, which was wrapped in 144 individual packages and hidden inside watermelon crates. Police are releasing few details about the sting, which is part of an ongoing investigation, other than to say they believe it to be part of a large drug trafficking operation out of Mexico. Velaczo-Rodriguez is charged with unlawful possession of cannabis with the intent to deliver. The uncharged men are from Aurora, California and Rockford



Man arrested in $2.5 Million Pot Bust
Friday November 23rd 2007, 9:42 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from chicagotribune.com-

By Josh Noel

A 33-year-old Mexican national remained in the Kane County Correctional Center on Friday in lieu of $150,000 bail after authorities said he planned to sell more than $2.5 million worth of marijuana.

Fernando Velaczo-Rodriguez of Guadalajara was one of six men arrested Tuesday by Aurora police in an industrial area in the 1500 block of Dearborn Street.

Authorities were responding to a tip that a large amount of drugs were to be delivered there. After staking out the area for less than an hour, police saw men unload several crates from a semitrailer truck, police spokesman Dan Ferrelli said Friday.

Inside the crates, the marijuana was bundled in 144 packages hidden amid watermelons.

The 2,580 pounds of marijuana are worth an estimated $2,580,000, police said.

Police believe the shipment is tied to a drug trafficking operation out of Mexico.

Velaczo-Rodriguez was charged with unlawful possession of cannabis with intent to deliver. The other five arrested were released without charges. Ferrelli would not say why they were released. He said other arrests, however, are possible.