Dwezelitsame
Well-Known Member
View attachment 1942252i just luv this plant
the sour is yielding its azz off though
the sour is yielding its azz off though
**that just looking fucking awesome sauceView attachment 1942252i just luv this plant
the sour is yielding its azz off though
why thank you mr wizzard how you be
[h=2]6 years for Web pot-seed vendor[/h]
Rebecca S. Green | The Journal Gazette
FORT WAYNE – A 30-year-old Michigan man was sentenced to more than six years in federal prison for running a large marijuana-growing operation that used the Internet to sell seeds around the world.
A federal grand jury had indicted Jesse S. Groth on a charge of manufacturing a controlled substance.
He and 21-year-old Laura Wass were accused of running a large business that grew marijuana and sold pot seeds online from a Hamilton Lake home.
According to court documents, the two shipped a variety of marijuana seeds throughout the U.S. and to other countries under the business name Elite Genetics. They lived in the home on Hamilton Lake in Steuben County.
The business came to light last year when a woman from another state e-mailed Ashley police, telling them her teenage son stole hundreds of dollars from her and admitted to sending the money to a marijuana-seed operation in Indiana.
When the woman searched her son’s computer, she found e-mails from Elite Genetics directing him to mail payments to Laura Wass on Hamilton Lake, according to court documents.
Around the same time, in a separate investigation, U.S. Postal Service inspectors contacted the Hamilton Police Department regarding Groth. He was a fugitive, having skipped out on a 2006 sentencing on federal wire fraud charges.
Groth had been charged with bilking eBay buyers out of thousands of dollars, not sending them sports cards they had bought. He was sentenced in absentia to two years in prison on two of the counts and ordered to pay $20,788 in restitution, according to court documents.
In July, Wass was sentenced to time already served and given no additional jail time for participating in the operation.
She pleaded guilty this year to a charge of manufacturing more than 100 marijuana plants.
In her sentencing order last week, U.S. District Judge Theresa L. Springmann ordered the 75-month sentence to be served after Groth finishes the time in the eBay case as well as additional time for failing to appear in that case.
Groth will also be required to serve four years of supervised release in addition to the prison sentences and abide by other terms of supervised release.
Groth is asking for the court to return some of his property, including computers, printers and his extensive sports card collection, which he said contains more than 100 rare cards, according to court documents.
Purple Cougar, with more side branching.Which Cougar is that one???