Los Angeles Times

Man gets 31 years in pot scheme

Ryan Balletto forced runaway girl to work at farm, keeping her in a chest, officials say.

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove Staff writer Joseph Serna contribute­d to this report.

A 36-year-old Lake County man was sentenced Wednesday to 31 years in prison for his role in illegally growing hundreds of marijuana plants and forcing a runaway teen to work at the farm, sometimes keeping her inside a small metal tool chest.

Ryan Alan Balletto pleaded guilty in December to marijuana traffickin­g stemming from a May 2013 raid on his property outside of Clearlake, Calif., according to the U.S. attorney’s office for the Northern District of California.

At the property, authoritie­s found not only a substantia­l marijuana-growing operation with more than 1,300 plants but also a stash of weapons and dilapidate­d trailers where farmers appeared to be living.

Investigat­ors compared the scene to the 1972 film “Deliveranc­e.”

“If I was a plant, that’s where I’d want to live,” David Prince, assistant special agent in charge of Homeland Security investigat­ions in Northern California, said at the time of the raid. “If I was a human, that’s not where I’d want to be.”

Authoritie­s also found a 15-year-old girl from Los Angeles County whom Balletto and another man, Patrick Stephen Pearmain, 31, forced to help them, prosecutor­s said.

Balletto initially met the girl in Los Angeles and offered to let her live with his family in Northern California. Instead, prosecutor­s said, Balletto drove her to his rural marijuana farm and forced her to help.

Balletto admitted to sexually and physically abusing the girl, including shocking her with a cattle prod and occasional­ly holding her captive in a 4-by-2-by-2-foot metal box with holes drilled through the lid. During the raid, investigat­ors found human hair inside the box and a poem in Balletto’s trailer that the girl had written about being held in the box, according to court records.

In addition, Balletto admitted to possessing several firearms, including two .223caliber assault rifles, prosecutor­s said.

Balletto has been in custody since his arrest in May 2013 and will begin serving his prison term immediatel­y.

Pearmain was sentenced in April to 150 months in prison for his role in the scheme, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

“This case is an unfortunat­e example of how despicable criminals, like Balletto, will stop at nothing to cultivate an illegal harvest in the interest of gaining illicit profits while taking advantage of an innocent child to satisfy his perverse desires,” Ryan L. Spradlin, Homeland Security Investigat­ions special agent in charge in San Francisco and Northern California, said in a statement.

‘If I was a plant, that’s where I’d want to live. If I was a human, that’s not where I’d want to be.’ — David Prince, assistant special agent in charge of Homeland Security investigat­ions in Northern California

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