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Herne Bay drugs couple Darren and Debra Wright face jail after extradition from Spain

17:00, 03 July 2013

updated: 17:32, 03 July 2013

Cannabis plants. Library image.
Cannabis plants. Library image.

A husband and wife who fled to Spain after police smashed their multi-million pound cannabis production empire are facing long prison sentences.

Darren and Debra Wright admitted conspiracy to produce the drug between April 2008 and April this year today after being extradited back to the UK.

Police described the couple, formerly of Canterbury Road, Herne Bay, as the main organisers of the network uncovered by the Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate.

Darren Wright, 47, and his 48-year-old wife decamped to the Costa Del Sol in June this year, but were arrested following extensive enquiries by detectives.

They were involved in the organisation of many sophisticated cannabis factories dating back to 2008.

Factories were discovered in Lodgewood Road, Ashford, a farm in Wootton and units in Coombe Valley Road, Dover, and the Joseph Wilson industrial estate in Whitstable.

Two more factories were raided in Canterbury Road and Mortimer Street, Herne Bay, in 2012.

Judge Charles Macdonald QC remanded the couple, now of Pevensey Bay, East Sussex, in custody after they entered the pleas at Maidstone Crown Court.

They will be sentenced on July 25.

DC Donna Hopper, who headed the investigation with DC David Godden, said afterwards: "It is estimated that the potential income from these factories was in the region of £4 million, with some of the factories containing around 2,000 plants.

"It was a sophisticated set up managed by Vietnamese illegal immigrants who had to live in cramped and dangerous conditions.

"Evidence of the Wrights' involvement came as a result of extensive enquiries following the discovery of a number of individual factories.

"We were able to link the factories to a John Read who was imprisoned for 10-years in 2011 for three of those finds."

Maidstone Crown Court. Picture: John Wardley
Maidstone Crown Court. Picture: John Wardley

DC Hopper added: "With the discovery of two more cannabis houses in Herne Bay in 2012 the net tightened on the Wrights and they fled to Spain.

"It transpired they owned property there and by working with the Spanish Police we were able to locate them and extradite them back to the UK.

"We work closely with forces in other countries and will leave no stone unturned to ensure that those responsible for criminal activity are held to account."

The Wrights' convictions bring the total number of offenders convicted of involvement in the operation to 13.

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