Pubdate: Mon, 24 Nov 2014 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2014 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Note: Rarely prints out-of-state LTEs. Author: Gal Tziperman Lotan Page: A1 WHEN HOMES GO TO POT 700-Plus Marijuana Grow Houses Found in Area Since 2010 When new residents moved into the Los Alamitos Court cul-de-sac where Roger Concepcion lives, they put up a tall white fence around the property. "Since the house sold, and sold quick, I said, 'Oh, we're going to have new neighbors,' " Concepcion said. "Then we never saw them." As Orange County sheriff 's investigators later found out, the fence wasn't the only modification to the two-story terra-cotta-colored home in the Kempton Park neighborhood. The main electrical line on the street was tapped, funneling extra power into the house through wires that ran to the roof. The siphoned electricity was used for heat lamps, air conditioners and other equipment necessary to tend to 764 marijuana plants - a full-scale indoor-grow-house operation, said Lt. Mike Rosier, a narcotics investigator for the Orange County Sheriff 's Office. The operation was a surprise to neighbors, who did not suspect or smell much before a fire tore through the home's roof Oct. 9, Concepcion said. Firefighters swept the house looking for residents in danger but found only hundreds of cannabis plants. The new neighbors have not been seen since. "Things like this could happen anywhere; you just don't know," said Concepcion, who has lived in the neighborhood for nearly a decade. "Luckily they're out. We don't need that type of stuff around here. Everybody has kids." Since 2010, authorities in Central Florida have found more than 700 marijuana grow houses, confiscating more than 30,000 cannabis plants. The largest hauls came from Orange and Volusia, where deputy sheriffs confiscated more than 6,000 plants in each county since 2010. Some operations were housed in trailers or storage facilities. But many others were discovered in unassuming houses in suburban neighborhoods. "It's not that hard to detect," Rosier said of grow houses. "You can smell it; you can smell the grow when they open or close the door." The grow house on Los Alamitos Court was discovered about a month and a half after the new residents moved in, when the electrical tap on the roof malfunctioned, setting the house on fire, Rosier said. Deputies have questioned two people in the case, who Rosier said may have a connection to other grow houses in Central Florida, but have not made any arrests. Hidden in sight Grow houses can use two or three times as much electricity as an average residence, said Lt. Bobby Goggin of the Volusia County Sheriff 's Office. Bypassing the meter means residents don't have to pay for extra power and don't raise any red flags with the electric companies because of extraordinarily high usage. But residential grids are ill-equipped to handle the amount of electricity needed for a large grow house, and the taps can be done sloppily, often causing fires. "When they come in and try to divert the power when it comes into the house, that 's when it causes problems," Goggin said. The largest indoor grow houses are usually hidden in plain sight, in big houses relatively removed from neighbors, with manicured yards and polite, quiet residents. "Just because there's an indoor grow in the neighborhood, that doesn't mean they're going to be mobsters or thugs or anything like that. In fact it's going to be the opposite," Goggin said. "They're going to mow the lawn because they don't want to bring any attention." The tipoff in some cases is the smell, Goggin said. Neighbors, landscapers or food-delivery drivers often call authorities saying they detect the odor of marijuana, he said. "There's normally such a strong smell when there's an indoor grow, it overtakes the entire house," Goggin said. But a strong smell of pot is not enough for a warrant, Rosier said. Law-enforcement officers have a number of ways to get more evidence. Some will find an informant who has been inside the house to describe the operation. Others will stake out the property, wait for a car that may be carrying drugs to leave, then try to pull over the driver on a minor traffic violation. And sometimes, officers will simply knock on the door, say they smell something funny, and people inside the house will confess. That's what happened when a Polk County deputy sheriff came to David Shultz's door in January, records show. "I know your [sic] growing marijuana, I can smell it ," the deputy said to Shultz, whom he could see through a window, according to his report. "I know, I will open the door in a minute, OK," Shultz said, according to the report. "You got me, I'm going to go away for a long time, I just want to smoke a cigarette." Shultz opened the door - holding a joint, deputies said. He was arrested, and deputies later found 217 plants in the house. Once investigators are inside a grow house, they typically find air-conditioning units, lamps and fertilizers. They often also find a small corner with a cot, some fast-food wrappers, cheap beer and an old television, Goggin said. That's where the person taking care of the plants sleeps, he said. "You've got to know how much your bosses are making, and you're living in this room with a 20-year-old TV and you don't even have cable in there," he said. Lower threshold Large grow houses can be incredibly profitable, with each adult plant producing up to thousands of dollars' worth of product a year. But law enforcement can now more harshly punish pot growers caught with as little as 25 plants. In 2008, the state Legislature lowered the threshold for how many plants must be found for a residence to be considered a grow house intended for wide distribution and profit from 300 to 25. Before the law passed, prosecutors could not obtain long sentences for defendants caught growing dozens of plants, then-Attorney General Bill McCollum said in an interview last week U.S. law was of no help either: Under federal guidelines manufacturing between 50 and 99 marijuana plants carries a sentence of no more than five years for a first offense. "The objective was to try and discourage and get rid of grow houses," McCollum said. A person growing marijuana can now be sentenced to up to 15 years for a first offense. The law changed to recognize that the marijuana itself might not be the only issue in some grow houses, McCollum said. Fires, home invasions and drug trafficking can cause bigger problems for neighbors, he said. "We weren't after the marijuana; we were after the grow houses," he said. Osceola County recorded its first grow-house-related homicide Oct. 30, said sheriff 's spokeswoman Twis Lizasuain. Yury Francisco Campos-Diaz died as flames spread through his rented Poinciana home. Osceola County deputies later found about 100 marijuana plants in the house. The cause of Campos-Diaz's death is part of an open investigation and is not being released to the public, Lizasuain said. The state fire marshal is investigating what caused the fire. The growing operation in the house did not seem amateurish, investigators said. Utility workers found a cable that ran from the main electric line on the street to the home's power grid. "He certainly knew what he was doing," Osceola Violent Crimes Unit Sgt. Ivan Molina said. "That's for sure." Staff writer Henry Pierson Curtis contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom