Pubdate: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 Source: Midweek News (UK) Copyright: 2004, Trinity Mirror Plc. Contact: http://icberkshire.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0400bracknell/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2839 Author: James Osborne CANNABIS FACTORY YIELDS ONE OF THE BIGGEST-EVER HAULS A PROFESSIONAL gambler who staked his winnings on one of the UK's biggest cannabis factories was jailed with his two partners in crime for a total of 17 years on Friday. The trio had conspired to produce cannabis at a secret #1.3 million drugs farm hidden behind a thatched cottage in Finchamp-stead. Gerard Murphy of Reading Road, Finchampstead, Keith Alexander and Ian Rollison were busted during a dawn raid when more than 100 officers swooped on the state-of-the-art factory on April 28. It was capable of hydroponically growing 1.3 million pounds worth of the illegal drug a year. Jailing the three men, Judge Stanley Spence said: "This was a massive cultivation of cannabis enterprise which was controlled by you, Murphy. "Even though cannabis has been reclassified to C from B it is still a prohibited drug. "The police search took four days, which gives us an indication of the massive scale." Murphy, aged 35, who had invested 20,000 pounds of horse gambling winnings into the enterprise, was jailed for seven and a half years. Judge Spence told the defendant, who was convicted by a jury on October 22: "You are the only known provider of money for the preparation of growing sheds and provision of items required for them. "I do not accept that you are the only provider of funds. I am content there must have been others." Jailing scaffolder Rollison, aged 41, for five years, Judge Spence told him: "You are described as the caretaker of the site. You must have known what was going on." Jailing bricklayer Alexander, aged 42, for four and a half years, he added: "Your role is the most minimal and involved general help in setting up and construction. "You must have known what was going on." Following Murphy's conviction, Detective Constable Steven Jones said the cannabis factory was the biggest-ever seized in the Thames Valley and possibly the largest in the UK. Thames Valley Police drug valuation expert Paul Norley told the jury it was the largest cannabis factory he had seen in his 20-year career. Giving evidence from the witness box, Murphy said he had been house-sitting the thatched cottage for owner Kevin Cox, the European director for phone giant Nokia, at the time. He initially claimed he had thought the cannabis was a plant called khat - a leaf chewed by Ethiopians to produce an amphetamine effect. Murphy, of Reading Road, Finchampstead, denied one charge of conspiring to produce cannabis between January 28 and April 29 this year. Rollison, of Station Approach, West Byfleet, Surrey and Alexander, of Downside Road, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, admitted the charge. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)