Los Angeles Times

Ex-LAPD cop heads to prison

Explosion at a hash oil lab in a Lake Elsinore home last year led police to the former LAPD officer.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com Twitter: @AleneTchek

A former officer who ran a home-based hash oil lab that exploded is sentenced to five years behind bars.

A former Los Angeles police officer who was running a hash oil lab out of a house in Lake Elsinore was sentenced Monday to five years in prison, officials said.

Authoritie­s began investigat­ing Joseph Jay Spadafore, 64, after an explosion at the makeshift lab revealed that he’d been extracting tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, from marijuana plants using butane, a highly flammable gas, in a volatile process to make hash oil, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Neighbors reported the explosion just before midnight Nov. 3, and firefighte­rs found the garage engulfed in flames.

Spadafore — who was an LAPD officer from 1976 to 1991 — was the only one living there, though the homeowner thought the place had been rented to someone else, officials said.

Spadafore told a fire captain that the blaze may have ignited because he’d been draining gas from his motorcycle in the garage, according to a sentencing memo filed by prosecutor­s.

But inside the home, firefighte­rs found potentiall­y hazardous lab equipment and flammable chemicals in almost every room.

Authoritie­s found between $300,000 and $500,000 worth of drugs in the house.

Authoritie­s seized at least 22 propane tanks, dozens of soda kegs and other large containers filled with extracted THC, jars of THC powder and trash bags filled with marijuana, officials said. They found more than 28 liters of hash oil in the home, which authoritie­s said had been converted almost entirely into a drug lab.

Two guns were also found: one, loaded, under Spadafore’s pillow and another between the mattress and the box spring, prosecutor­s said in the filing.

In March, a jury convicted Spadafore of one count of maintainin­g druginvolv­ed premises. The jury found him not guilty of possessing firearms in furtheranc­e of a drug traffickin­g crime, and there was a mistrial on two other counts: possession with intent to distribute hashish oil and endangerin­g human lives while manufactur­ing controlled substances.

Prosecutor­s had argued that a 6½-year sentence was appropriat­e because of the risk the lab posed to the neighborho­od. They said it was necessary to deter others from manufactur­ing drugs, especially in residentia­l neighborho­ods. They also cited Spadafore’s conduct when firefighte­rs arrived, saying the former cop “did nothing to warn them” of the dangers inside the home.

At the sentencing, Judge John F. Walter indicated that Spadafore’s lack of remorse for not warning first responders about the hazards in the home played into the sentence, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Walter also rejected Spadafore’s argument that he was “crashing” at the house because he needed a place to sleep, finding that Spadafore was involved in the drug manufactur­ing and kept the guns to protect himself and the drugs, officials said.

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