Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2008 Source: Press, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2008 The Christchurch Press Company Ltd. Contact: http://www.press.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/349 Author: Helen Murdoch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) DRUG-GROWER TO KEEP FARM A convicted Motueka cannabis grower has been ordered to pay the Solicitor-General $200,000 for the profits he made from growing and selling the drug on his rural property. An application by the Solicitor-General that Graham Donald Sturgeon forfeit his 107ha property, assessed as being worth about $1.5 million, was dismissed by Judge David McKegg in a reserved decision. Sturgeon, 50, was convicted in 2005 of cultivating, selling and supplying cannabis, and money laundering after police raided his Orinoco Valley farm in 2003. A jury found Sturgeon guilty of cultivating cannabis from 1997 to 2002. He was sentenced to five years jail, and an application for the forfeiture of the property to the Crown was made by the Solicitor-General. In a forfeiture hearing in the Nelson District Court last month, under the Proceeds of Crimes Act, prosecutor Glen Marshall said the property was tainted by its use for cannabis production. Sturgeon's income had equated to $36,000 gross a year for the six years before the search, and the property had mainly been a cannabis cultivation and storage base, Marshall said. The property was assessed as having a potential value of $1.57m, including land and buildings ($773,000), forestry ($730,000) and carbon credits ($70,000). The judge valued the cannabis recovered by police in 2003 at $96,000, but said the value of the offending, in relation to the worth of the property, was relatively low. He found an order for sale was out of proportion to the offence. However, he was satisfied Sturgeon had benefited from the cannabis operation and ordered he pay $200,000 to the Solicitor-General by October 1. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom