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Wales: 1million pounds a year drugs factory found

BBC News

Wednesday 04 Apr 2007

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A cannabis factory found at a disused hotel in Rhondda could have made
up to £1m a year, say South Wales Police.

The factory was discovered at Tylorstown after officers were tipped off
by a member of the public.

The "sophisticated" factory contained 2,300 cannabis plants and it may
have been in operation for "some considerable time", officers said.

Six men, three of Chinese origin and three from Vietnam, were arrested
and are in custody at Pontypridd.

The head of the police regional task force said around £250,000 of
cannabis was being generated at the factory in part of the Jubilee Hotel
every 12 weeks, making around £1m a year.

Cannabis plants in varying states of maturity were being grown in seven
rooms inside the disused hotel with the help of high intensity lighting,
deep compost and an irrigation system rigged up in a bathroom.

Det Ch Insp Colin Richards, said the cannabis factory was one of around
50 found in the south Wales area in the last year.

He said: "I believe it is the biggest single discovery of cannabis in
this area".

He said there was a "strong, pungent smell" coming from the factory,
which had been "overpowering" to people who entered the building.

Det Ch Insp Richards added it was likely one person would have lived in
one of the rooms, with the sole job of looking after the cannabis plants.

He also praised the person who tipped off officers, saying: "Without the
public we wouldn't have this find.

Estimated yield

"We do rely on the public coming forward and being our eyes and ears on
the streets."

The plants were being removed from the site and taken to a forensic
science laboratory in Chepstow, where the estimated yield of the plants
would be calculated.

Detective Inspector Nigel Cottle, from South Wales Police, said
detectives were also aware of a number of cultivations in the Gwent
Police area as well as Vale of Glamorgan and Cardiff.

Despite the downgrading of cannabis from a class B to a class C drug, he
said: "For us primarily it is and remains an illegal drug and to that
end, the cultivation and distribution of it are serious criminal offences."

Chief Superintendent Jeff Farrar, Divisional Commander for Merthyr and
Rhondda Cynon Taff, described it as "a significant find".

"I am in no doubt that what has been dismantled is an organised drugs
racket which intended to flood the area with the potent drug," he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/6523577.stm?ls

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