DEA emblem for Missouri agents |
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Mexican national pled guilty in
federal court today to his role in a Daviess County, Missouri,
marijuana-growing operation where law enforcement officers seized nearly $10
million worth of plants.
Miguel Pulido-Maldonado, also known as
“Mona,” 28, pled guilty before U.S. District Judge Greg Kays to one count of
conspiracy to manufacture and possess with the intent to distribute 1,000 or
more marijuana plants, and one count of illegally reentering the United States.
The Drug Enforcement Administration St.
Louis Division investigated the case with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives, the Northwest Missouri Drug Task Force, the Missouri
State Highway Patrol, the Daviess County, Missouri Sheriff’s Department, the
Grundy County Missouri Sheriff’s Department, the Buchanan County, Missouri
Sheriff’s Department, the Livingston County, Missouri Sheriff’s Department, and
the Department of Homeland Security.
The owners of the three real estate tracts
that comprise the property in Daviess County live in California. Law
enforcement officers, who had been keeping the marijuana grow site under
surveillance, executed a search warrant at the property on August 27, 2018. The
plants were in a clearing inside a large area of timber. A distinct path led
from a building in the wooded area to the area containing the marijuana plants.
Officers located approximately 2,464
cultivated marijuana plants. With an approximate street value of $1,800 per
pound of marijuana, this results in approximately $9,757,440 in marijuana
plants seized. Under the terms of today’s plea agreement, Pulido-Maldonado must
forfeit that amount to the government as illegal drug-trafficking proceeds. The
Daviess County property must also be forfeited to the government.
Pulido-Maldonado, who ran into the woods
to escape custody, was arrested on August 30, 2018; he was covered in mud, his
arms had numerous bites from either mosquitos or other insects and it appeared
he had been outside for several days. Pulido-Maldonado had previously illegally
entered the United States and was removed on January 30, 2017.
how many acres of land was that ? any pictures?
ReplyDeleteI've been unable to find any pictures or size information about the plantation. I found this, however:
Delete"The plants were in a clearing inside a large stand of timber."
https://ktvo.com/news/local/10-million-of-marijuana-found-growing-in-missouri-field-09-06-2018
Hey dude? Who is this vato running around on this private land?
ReplyDeleteSo the property owners forfeit their land even if they were unaware that there was an illegal grow?
ReplyDelete