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Drug grower Chris Wolff left name on council tax bill as clue after fleeing Canterbury cannabis factory

00:01, 02 May 2013

Chris Wolff, of Milton Close, Canterbury, was jailed for two years for drugs offences
Chris Wolff, of Milton Close, Canterbury, was jailed for two years for drugs offences

Tenant Chris Wolff was nabbed as one of the gang behind a cannabis factory in Canterbury – because of a council tax bill.

The 59-year-old had rented the property in Milton Close, which was then converted to grow more than 80 plants.

Police went to the area after neighbours complained about a bust-up in the street in September last year.

When officers arrived everyone had disappeared but they smelled cannabis coming from a nearby house.

Inside they discovered the plants, hydroponics equipment, lighting, timers, extractor fans and a clue about who was responsible for the operation.

Prosecutor Jim Harvey told Canterbury Crown Court Wolff had fled, leaving behind a council tax bill in his name and also his prison card.

Now the drug addict, who had moved to the house shortly after leaving jail, is back in prison for two years after admitting producing the class B drug.

His barrister Robert Conway claimed Wolff was "just babysitting" the cannabis operation for £100 a day and some of the drugs.

He said the disturbance that led to the police raid was a group of men trying to force their way inside to snatch part of the skunk – which had a street value of up to £16,000.

The court heard some of the plants had already been harvested before last year's raid.

A cannabis factory (file picture)
A cannabis factory (file picture)

A cannabis factory was discovered in Milton Close, Canterbury

Mr Conway said Wolff, who had convictions for a number of drug offences, was not the brains behind the operation.

He said: "He was just a caretaker, but he did know what he was doing. He didn't have the wherewithal to fund such an operation.

"It was a rather stupid thing to do because the council tax bill and the prison card both had his name on them, so it would always come back to him because he was the tenant."

Judge Adele Williams told Wolff: "You have a significant number of previous convictions, including the possession of all manner of drugs.

"You had not long been released from prison when you took up this offer to take care the production of cannabis in a residential area."

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