The Chronicle

Cannabis farm is busted by police

- Kate Kyriacou

Queensland police have disrupted a national drug syndicate whose members were scouting for farms in isolated parts of the state to use for massive cannabis plantation­s, it will be alleged.

Detectives seized $23 million worth of cannabis during a raid on a farm at Coominya in the Somerset region, where it will be alleged thousands of plants were being grown in sophistica­ted greenhouse­s.

It is the 12th cannabis farm police have shut down, allegedly involving the syndicate.

Aerial footage of the property shows 19 greenhouse­s lined up beside a dam, each one measuring 70m long.

Inside, police allegedly discovered nearly 3000 cannabis plants.

Another 1500 seedlings were allegedly found inside two hydroponic grow rooms inside a house and shipping container on the farm.

There was nobody at the property when police raided it on May 15, but three days later, detectives arrested a 26-yearold man while executing a search warrant at a Heathwood address.

Drug and Serious Crime Group Detective Inspector Brad Phelps said setups like the one found in Coominya could produce three or four crops per year.

“It’s a significan­t disruption to an organised crime syndicate,” he said.

Inspector Phelps alleged the syndicate was involved in traffickin­g, as well as the commercial production of cannabis.

“And that’s not just in Queensland, it’s across a number of jurisdicti­ons, including New South Wales, Victoria and the Northern Territory,” he said.

“But certainly it was a largescale production facility that had been set up on this property for the sole purpose of producing cannabis.”

He said police had arrested one man and charged him with producing a commercial quantity of a dangerous drug and were still looking for others.

“What we’re finding (is) these are isolated rural locations where this production is occurring,” Inspector Phelps said.

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