Western Mail

After huge cannabis farm found

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site in London, where he was paid £30 a day.

He was then approached by a group of men who offered him £40 a day to look after cannabis plants in a house.

Shkalla told the police he accepted because he “needed the money” as he was in debt in Albania.

He said he agreed to take the job for three months before returning to his home country.

He claimed he was shown how to look after the young plants and another man was responsibl­e for the more mature plants.

The defendant told officers he had been living temporaril­y at the address for about a month before his arrest and had not received any money but was given food and drink.

He accepted he knew that it was illegal to grow cannabis in the UK.

Prosecutor­s argued he played a significan­t role in the chain as a gardener and that he was motivated by financial gain.

Ms Payne suggested he was involved in producing a “significan­t quantity” of the Class B drug for commercial use.

She said there would be no applicatio­n under the Proceeds of Crime Act.

Shkalla, 27, who does not have a permanent address in the UK, admitted producing cannabis.

Richard Ace, defending, said: “There was an element of naivety, an element of exploitati­on.”

He accepted it was a substantia­l set-up but told the court his client had “little awareness” of the scale.

Mr Ace added: “He was a relatively young man, with no English, hundreds of miles away from home. He was taken advantage of.”

Judge Jenkins made an order for the cannabis plants to be destroyed.

In his sentencing remarks, he said: “[The police] found a substantia­l cannabis factory.

“More than 250 plants were located on the first floor and in the attic of the building, along with a large amount of dried cannabis, showing there had been at least one previous harvest.”

Shkalla was jailed for 20 months and will have to pay a victim surcharge when he is released.

The judge warned him he is likely to be deported halfway through his sentence but told him that would be a decision for the Home Office.

After the case, people living in the area reported smelling cannabis before the raid took place.

“Occasional­ly we would smell something but I wouldn’t say it was a strong smell,” said one neighbour, who asked not to be named.

“It is not the sort of area where it would expect this to happen.

“I wouldn’t say it was obvious that anything was happening else we would’ve reported it.”

Another neighbour, who also asked to remain anonymous, added: “Obviously we saw that the police were there for two days and two nights.

“They told us that it was to do with drugs. People could smell stuff.

“A man who lives across the park said he could smell it very strongly but not me.”

 ??  ?? > Police found 250 cannabis plants
> Police found 250 cannabis plants
 ??  ?? > Gentian Shkalla
> Gentian Shkalla

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