The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

U.S. seizes pot houses tied to China-based criminals

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO » Hundreds of federal and local law enforcemen­t agents have seized roughly 100 Northern California houses purchased with money wired to the United States by a Chinese-based crime organizati­on and used to grow massive amounts of marijuana illegally, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

The raids culminate a monthslong investigat­ion focusing on dozens of Chinese nationals who bought homes in seven counties. Most of the buyers were in the country legally and came from as far away as Georgia, Illinois New York, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, U.S. Attorney McGregor Scott said.

Much of the pot was shipped back to those states through Atlanta, Chicago and New York City.

The drug is legal in California but requires permits to grow and can’t be sent across state lines. It is still banned by the U.S. government. Black-market pot farms are often set up in the inland region where authoritie­s carried out the raids because it’s cheaper than the San Francisco Bay Area.

“This criminal organizati­on has put a tremendous amount of equity into these homes through these wire transfers coming in from China and elsewhere,” Scott said in an interview with The Associated Press. “We’re going to take it. We’re going to take the house. We’re going to take the equity.”

None of the buyers was arrested as authoritie­s seized the houses in what the U.S. Department of Justice called one of the largest residentia­l forfeiture operations ever. Prosecutor­s will now ask judges to transfer ownership to the U.S. government.

Authoritie­s were trying to learn if the buyers were brought to the United States for the purpose of buying the houses and were indebted to the criminal organizati­on. They are not ruling out criminal charges but have filed none at this stage of the investigat­ion.

Down payments were financed by money wired from Fujian Province in China, authoritie­s said. Many of the transfers stayed just below the $50,000 limit imposed by the Chinese government.

The buyers generally used the same Sacramento real estate agents, borrowed from private lenders who usually charge higher interest rates and require larger down payments than traditiona­l banks, and used straw buyers who purchased the properties on behalf of the real owners.

A message left with the Chinese consulate general’s office in San Francisco was not immediatel­y returned.

The federal crackdown on the illegal pot operations comes as California is months into creating the world’s largest legal marijuana market amid uncertaint­y about whether the U.S. government will try to shut it down.

More than 500 officers, including SWAT teams, fanned out over two days to search and seize about 75 houses and two real estate businesses. The remaining 25 houses were raided previously.

They seized more than 36,000 marijuana plants, 253 pounds of processed marijuana, at least $68,500 in cash and 15 firearms, including one that had been stolen. They also seized generators, one of which was strong enough to power three normal homes.

Most of the suburban houses were valued at $300,000 to $500,000, though some were in rural areas and some in more upscale neighborho­ods.

Black-market pot operations have been a widespread problem in Northern California for at least a dozen years. Sacramento officials have estimated that there might be as many as 1,000 illegal grow houses in California’s capital city.

Suburban tract homes are transforme­d with high intensity lights and irrigation pipes, gutted to add ventilatio­n pipes and air filtration systems to vent the tell-tale smell through the attic, and stacked with tables full of marijuana plants that could produce multiple crops each year.

“It’s like industrial agricultur­e,” Scott said.

Authoritie­s often are alerted when the houses catch fire because of illegal electrical hookups or when they are found to be using extraordin­ary amounts of electricit­y to power the equipment.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Trays used to grow marijuana plants in a home converted into a hydroponic garden are scattered in a backyard in Elk Grove, California. On Wednesday, McGregor Scott, the United States Attorney For the Eastern District of California, announced that a...
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Trays used to grow marijuana plants in a home converted into a hydroponic garden are scattered in a backyard in Elk Grove, California. On Wednesday, McGregor Scott, the United States Attorney For the Eastern District of California, announced that a...
 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? McGregor Scott, the United States Attorney For the Eastern District of California, discusses the months-long investigat­ion that led to the law enforcemen­t raids on illegal pot grows in roughly 100 Northern California homes. The raids, conducted Tuesday...
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS McGregor Scott, the United States Attorney For the Eastern District of California, discusses the months-long investigat­ion that led to the law enforcemen­t raids on illegal pot grows in roughly 100 Northern California homes. The raids, conducted Tuesday...

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