Pubdate: Sun, 18 Dec 2005
Source: Tennessean, The (TN)
Copyright: 2005 The Tennessean
Contact:  http://www.tennessean.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447
Author: Leon Alligood
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

3 MEN GREW POT IN CAVE, D.A. SAYS

Authorities Say Operation Could Grow 100 Pounds Every 8 Weeks

HARTSVILLE, Tenn. - Investigators from the 15th Judicial District Drug Task 
Force found a mother lode of marijuana in the unlikeliest of places - a cave.

Beneath a stylish A-frame home on Dixon Springs Road in eastern Trousdale 
County, three men allegedly set up a sophisticated operation to grow as 
much as 100 pounds of marijuana every eight weeks.

"It's pretty amazing what they had under there - water for irrigation, 
special lighting, devices to keep the humidity just right. These guys were 
professionals. They knew what they were doing," said District Attorney 
General Tommy Thompson of Hartsville.

"They could grow in 60 days what it would take four and a half months to 
grow outside."

Arrested on Wednesday were Brian Gibson and Greg Compton, while a third 
man, Fred Strunk, was arrested near Gainesville, Fla. All three are in 
jail, with Gibson and Compton being held in the Trousdale County Jail. Bail 
was set for Gibson and Compton at $5 million, while Strunk's was set at $15 
million, Thompson said. Local authorities were in Florida yesterday to 
return Strunk to Tennessee.

According to the district attorney general, the investigation into the 
operation began about five years ago when a home was built above the cave, 
but it never appeared anyone lived there.

"The front of the cave used to be a hole that you'd crawl into, and it 
opened up into a pretty big room that was 20-feet high. They cut the side 
of the hill so you could just drive right into the cave," Thompson said.

The cave, reached from the house via secret entrances, is said to be about 
two miles long, but the marijuana operation was located about 100 yards 
inside. Thompson said the other end of the cave had been blocked to keep 
trespassers out.

According to the prosecutor, the men told locals they were going to be 
mining statuary rock.

In another suspicious incident, the local electric company was asked to 
install a larger transformer than usually required by a residence. But 
apparently that was not enough electrical power to operate the grow lamps 
required to raise 800 marijuana plants at a time. Instead of asking the 
electric company for more power, the men spliced into the Tri-County 
Electric line and were stealing electricity, Thompson said.

"They had the operation set up so that one person could operate it during 
the growing season," he noted.

To harvest the illegal crop, Thompson said the men would hire a half-dozen 
Hispanic workers in Arizona and drive them to Tennessee. For part of the 
journey the windows on the van would be covered so the workers did not know 
where they were.

"They would drive right into the cave and let them out to begin working," 
the prosecutor said.

"As for distributing it, we're sure that some of it went to Nashville and 
other locations in the area."

There could be more arrests, but Thompson said he believes the ringleaders 
of the operation have already been nabbed.

"It's just unbelievable what they've done. It's like something out of a 
James Bond movie."
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