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Large-scale pot operation raided in Spring Hill
A huge at-home marijuana operation is foiled in a raid that brings eight arrests.
By JOHN FRANK, Times Staff Writer
Published November 15, 2007
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Marijuana plants grow by leaps and bounds inside a house at 10463 Thornberry Drive in Spring Hill. It was one of six raided on Wednesday and had a total of 117 plants. Suspicions of electrical diversion by an employee at Withlacoochee River Electric Cooperative led to the bust.
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[Special to the Times | U.S. Attorney's Office]
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[Special to the Times | U.S. Attorney's Office]
Marijuana plants removed from the house in Spring Hill. Authorities arrested eight people, none of whom had reported any income in the last 15 months. Some of the houses had multiple privacy fences.
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SPRING HILL -- On Killian Street, in between Lowell Avenue and Tanner Road, is a tan one-story block home with brown trim and the number 12407 to the left of the front door.
It looks like all the other cookie-cutter residences packed tightly along the residential roads that twist through this quiet bedroom community.
Except this home is not a home so much as a hub for a major marijuana growing operation busted in a raid Wednesday that involved more than 75 law enforcement officers from federal, state and multiple local agencies.
Hernando County Sheriff's spokeswoman Donna Black called it a "huge operation." The numbers support that assessment: six grow houses in Spring Hill, eight arrests, at least $15,000 in cash and 700 marijuana plants worth an estimated $700,000.
Those arrested were charged with conspiracy to manufacture 1,000 or more marijuana plants, according to warrants released by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tampa. If convicted, the suspects could face 10 years to life in prison on the federal charges.
The operation was sophisticated, according to warrants:
The suspected growers used many residences where federal agents believe they were in business for about eight months to a year. The suspects had not reported any income in the last 15 months. The indoor garden was primarily identified as the garage. The plants were in three sizes, the biggest resembling Christmas trees.
All locations involved diverted electrical power at the source to avoid suspicion by the electrical company. The wiring was nearly identical at each house, as were the irrigation systems. And most used privacy fences in some cases multiple fences to conceal extra air conditioning units installed at the homes.
Charles Perry, 20, lives next door to one of the houses raided early in the morning. Told of the drug bust, he stared in disbelief at his neighbor's home on Groveland Street. He saw the police cars parked outside but figured it was just a simple dispute.
"At first I didn't think anything was up," he said. "I know the guy who lives there. He's a grown man who just does his thing.
"That's crazy," Perry continued, still absorbing the news. "We live right here, and something's going on?"
Authorities began investigating the first week of October after an employee at Withlacoochee River Electric Cooperative suspected power diversion and installed a second meter at the house on Killian Street. It showed the owners were stealing about three-quarters of the electricity they were consuming. Hernando deputies were notified and days later began surveillance.
Soon, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration Customs Enforcement and officers from Pasco, Citrus and Sumter counties and Brooksville police became involved in the investigation.
The spying led to suspicion of several individuals, and property, income and driving record checks led to more suspects and more houses as authorities untangled the convoluted web.
In the end, eight people were arrested on drug charges, according to U.S. District Court documents: Carmen Chavez, Amaury Santiago, Maria Masullo, Milko Masullo, Raquel Leon-Faife, Luis Chavez-Perez, Yudisley Leon-Vega, and Eduardo Diaz-Soler.
And the six suspected grow operations were identified as these residences in Spring Hill: 12407 Killian St. (52 plants); 12507 Groveland St. (279 plants); 4132 Weldon Ave. (212 plants); 4338 Deltona Blvd. (40 plants); and 10463 Thornberry Drive. (117 plants).
John Frank can be reached at jfrank@sptimes.com or (352) 754-6114.
BY THE NUMBERS:
- 6 The number of grow houses involved in Tuesday's sweeping raids.
- 8 The number of people arrested during the early morning raids.
- 75 The number of law enforcement officers taking part in the raids.
- 700 The number of marijuana plants seized during the raids.
- $15,000 The amount of cash seized during the raids.
- $700,000 The estimated value of the marijuana plants.
[Last modified November 14, 2007, 20:54:26]
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Comments on this article
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by anonymus
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11/16/07 03:28 PM
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wow and the funny thing is...some on ei knew knows someof these people, and for whoever asked, they were all latin people
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by eric
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11/15/07 11:46 PM
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by the numbers... how much did it cost the tax payer to have the 75 officers to part take in this sting???? how much in court cost and public defender bills??? is it really all worth it...in california the goverment would pay you to do that....
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by Curious
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11/15/07 11:34 PM
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Um, Kim, what exactly is an AMERICAN name?
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by knucklehead
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11/15/07 10:14 PM
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When will these folks realize that you can't get away with this in Florida. Fools, the electric company gets you...
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by Jen
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11/15/07 04:59 PM
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If I were to judge what sort of people live in the Bay area based on the comments I see posted under various articles in the SPT, I would conclude there are pot-smoking, child-hating, gun-toting, partying folks who can't afford to pay their taxes.
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by I.P. Freely
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11/15/07 04:59 PM
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COWARD COPS! GO AFTER SOME REAL CRIMINALS LIKE THE HUNDREDS OF METH LABS! OH WAIT...THAT WOULD BE DANGEROUS! THE COPS GO AFTER THE VICTIMLESS CRIMES BECAUSE THEY DO NOT HAVE THE COURAGE TO GO AFTER REAL CRIMINALS! THAT IS THE REAL CRIME HERE. COWARDS
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by AL
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11/15/07 04:54 PM
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The over racism in these comments is alarming. Assuming citizenship by name is reprehensible. I know a lot of us soldiers with last names like Ramirez and Garcia. You shame them with your racism.
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by Tom
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11/15/07 04:30 PM
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Another example of the failed war on drugs. How did prohibition work by the way. The reason people grow weed is because it is so profitable due to the ridiculous laws. Is alcohol a gateway drug too? Alcohol is much more harmful that weed, thats FACT
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by Jason
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11/15/07 04:28 PM
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Nice plants....I say let's start raiding the ciggarette companies that sell to the public cancer sticks that are proven to kill thousands daily. Wait, the gov't. has made those OK for us to smoke. Frickin idiots.
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by John
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11/15/07 04:22 PM
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How Are They Gonna Get Rid Of All That? What Are They Gonna Do Burn It.
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by Derek
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11/15/07 04:06 PM
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Statistics show that Tonight 60 people will die due an alcohol related death in the United states. Only 1 person statistically will die tonight from actions taking after using marijuana.
Get real people. Marijuana is a Plant Not a Drug!
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by 68 BEETLE
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11/15/07 03:18 PM
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GUESS WHO IS GOING TO PAY FOR THEM TO STAY IN PRISON.
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by Willow
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11/15/07 02:15 PM
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It's unecessary actions such as this that drive up the cost of weed....
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by RWJ
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11/15/07 01:32 PM
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Great for the Sheriff, now he has 5 pieces of property, that ought to put a few bucks in his account. 3 of the 5 had no homestead, 4 of the 5 moved here within 18 months. I wonder how many more are here doing business? R there any of them legal?
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by Drew
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11/15/07 01:26 PM
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What a waste of my tax dollars. Thanks for nothing. And why would it take 75 officers a month and a half? Stupidity in government agencies. Wasteful.
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by The Nuge
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11/15/07 01:11 PM
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Why dont you burnouts elect people to pass legalization laws so you can quit complaining about laws on the books?
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by Rick
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11/15/07 01:00 PM
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All you people who think pot is OK, because everybody is doing it. What if everybody starts using harder drugs? Show me a hard drug user and I'll show you someone who started with pot!
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by Jack Christmas
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11/15/07 12:30 PM
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Bout as big of a waste of public resources as there is. Those 75 officers could have been out tracking down murderers and rapists.
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by Towley
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11/15/07 12:20 PM
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Im sure the plants and TREES will be disposed of properly... right???? HA!
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by dick
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11/15/07 12:03 PM
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article should of had more detail about the growing and irrigation process
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by brown
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11/15/07 11:30 AM
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"As big a Christmas Trees" Thats a tree I would love to have, when done with the tree take it out back and burn it and enjoy the smoke. No more trees laying beside the road in January.
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by KIM
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11/15/07 11:26 AM
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1ST OF ALL 8 PEOPLE WERE ARRESTED WHO EVIDENTLY BY THEIR NAMES ARE NOT EVEN AMERICAN. SO ARE THEY EVEN HERE LEGALLY?? 2ND, WE USED OUR TAXPAYERS MONEY TO ARREST THEM. 3RD NOW THEY ARE IN OUR JAIL WHERE WITH OUR TAXPAYERS MONEY WE ARE FEEDING THEM!
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by FRANK
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11/15/07 09:59 AM
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I AGREE WITH BILL,THERE ARE OTHER CRIMES THAT SHOULD BE INVESTIGATED. THERE ARE POLICE OFFICERS THAT GET HIGH RIGHT UNDER THIER NOSES. MARIJUANA SHOULD BE LEGAL FOR THOSE THAT ARE IN CHRONIC PAIN AND THERE ARE SOME STATES THAT MAKE IT LEGAL FOR THESE
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by jim
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11/15/07 09:50 AM
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Congrats to the power guy for being alert!!! Good going, you should get the $15k seized money as a reward. But do not count on it, but aleast you get a great "attaboy" from me and very many other thankful citizens.
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by Norman
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11/15/07 09:49 AM
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Couldn't we spend better resources on catching real criminals besides pot growers. We need to decriminalize marijuana. The fact that you could get 10 years for growing pot while a rapist gets only 7 years is a travesty. I totally agree with Bill.
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by Maryann
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11/15/07 09:33 AM
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Excellent work by our Sheriff's dept. Many of them moved here in the past 2 yrs. Are they here legally?
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by bob
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11/15/07 09:00 AM
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yep thats as pretty as it gets,,,right there,
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by Kevin
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11/15/07 08:57 AM
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Are any of these suspects american citizens?
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by alaiando
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11/15/07 08:56 AM
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i see one team was an husband and wife ,such a good start wonder if they will see each other in the next ten yrs, electric deverson,,,sounds like crap to me ,someone tipped off the cops,,and they waited till they got it all ,,,or did they?
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by Paul
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11/15/07 08:36 AM
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they can get life in prison for this? How draconian! Cigarettes kill people yet those execs walk free and lie to Congress. Amazing how strong the laws are for this plant. Who is so against it? Our laws are too strong and somewhat pointless.
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by Jen
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11/15/07 07:59 AM
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It sounds like these people went through a lot of trouble for this. Why couldn't they have just gotten jobs?
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by EGS
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11/15/07 06:59 AM
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Tragic, that we have people concerned about the loss of a tree with no thought about the loss of our children.....Good Job Sheriff Nugent!
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by Bill
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11/15/07 06:09 AM
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Tragic. It's such a waste of public resources to destroy something of such beauty. Reform marijuana laws now! Stop the madness.
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by neighbor
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11/15/07 12:45 AM
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Carmen Chavez,Amaury Santiago,Maria Masullo,Milko Masullo,Raquel Leon-Faife,Luis Chavez-Perez,Yudisley Leon-Vega,& Eduardo Diaz-Soler. Lets see, 8 X $55 per day(approx federal cost)$160,600.00 yr to us taxpayers,while they await fair trial-whats up?
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