We do work 'round here

skeptikal
Premium Member

Hold the wheel and drive
Lol. Granted i've done a little hustle but this guy did work. I couldn't figure out how he got it all in his house without anyone knowing. Took 'em 6 months to get the guy.

http://www.journalgazette.net/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080307/LOCAL07/803070328/1002/LOCAL

About 10 minutes from my mom's house in Harlan. For the lazy ones...

Journal Gazette March 7 said:
6,700 pounds of pot seized

Police grab $6 million haul, AK-47

By Abby ****sky

The Journal Gazette

HARLAN – With a small statue of the Virgin Mary in a window and an American flag flying in front, the Antwerp Road home police raided Thursday looked like an average family home.

But what police found inside the home was anything but average.

Inside the house at 22633 Antwerp Road, just east of Harlan, Allen County police found about 6,700 pounds of marijuana.

Wrapped in large plastic bricks, the marijuana filled the home’s basement, lining the walls and sharing spaces with exercise equipment and a collection of “Star Wars” figurines.

DVDs from “The Sopranos” lay on the floor near the area where the marijuana was found, and a “Scarface” poster was the only art on the wall in a small room in the basement.

When Allen County police stopped Matthew McChesney, 29, for speeding Wednesday night near Reed Road and State Boulevard, they found 12 pounds of marijuana in a gym bag in his car, along with about $100,000 in cash, police said.

Police had already spent more than six months investigating McChesney, Allen County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Steve Stone said.

But it was what they found when they served a warrant at McChesney’s rented home early Thursday that shocked them.

“They knew that he was a big player and expected that there would be dope in the house, but I don’t think anyone would ever expect to find that much,” Stone said.

Allen County narcotics detectives had dealt with McChesney in the past, Stone said.

Police were calling the raid the biggest drug bust the sheriff’s department has ever had, Stone said, adding that some members of the department’s narcotics division have been with the department for 30 years.

“It was the biggest drug bust that anyone remembers for the sheriff’s department,” he said.

The police weren’t the only people surprised at what they found in McChesney’s home.

Kent Delagrange said McChesney moved in next door to him about two years ago.

Until Thursday, when police, media and curious passers-by lined the street in front of McChesney’s house, Delagrange said he’d never seen so many cars in the area.

“It was so quiet down there,” Delagrange said.

In Harlan, where traffic signs warn drivers of the possibility of buggies on the road almost as often as the speed limit, neighbors generally watch out for one another, Delagrange said.

Not so with McChesney.

“He was not a friendly person,” Delagrange said.

Delagrange said he always wondered about the man who frequently switched vehicles – always driving expensive models – and seemed to have more than enough money.

“I’m like, what does this guy do?” he said, adding that he thought McChesney might have worked with computers.

McChesney, Stone said, told police he was self-employed.

Inside the house, which has a screened-in pavilion overlooking a private pond in the back, several bedrooms and at least two bathrooms, police seized an AK-47, workout equipment, electronics and anything else of value and loaded it all with the marijuana into a rented moving truck.

Sheriff Ken Fries said McChesney will have to prove later that the items weren’t bought with drug money to get them back.

The drugs police found in McChesney’s home, Fries said, could easily have a street value of more than $6 million.

A company was called in to remove four heavy-duty safes, each weighing about 1,500 pounds, from the garage. Two of the safes were empty, one contained marijuana and police were not releasing information about what was being kept in the fourth safe, Stone said.

Police also served search warrants at three other homes, all in Fort Wayne, that McChesney either owned or had some connection to, Stone said. Officers did not find a significant amount of drugs at the three Fort Wayne homes.

McChesney was taken to the Allen County Lockup on preliminary charges of dealing marijuana and possession of marijuana and was being held without bail. Because of the amount of marijuana found, police expect federal charges to be filed against McChesney.

Police also said they expect to be making more arrests in connection with the marijuana found in McChesney’s home.
 
You would think someone so big in the game would have been a little smarter than keeping 7,000lbs of weed in his house.

About Abby Slutsky I can only imagine the torture she suffered growing up //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/laugh.gif.48439b2acf2cfca21620f01e7f77d1e4.gif

 
You would think someone so big in the game would have been a little smarter than keeping 7,000lbs of weed in his house.
About Abby Slutsky I can only imagine the torture she suffered growing up //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/laugh.gif.48439b2acf2cfca21620f01e7f77d1e4.gif
Lol really I was baffled as to how he accumulated weight like that without anyone noticing. They said it filled an entire bedroom and half of his basement.

What's the law of supply and demand say?? I picked the wrong time to be out of the game.

 
Lol really I was baffled as to how he accumulated weight like that without anyone noticing. They said it filled an entire bedroom and half of his basement.
What's the law of supply and demand say?? I picked the wrong time to be out of the game.
Law of supply and demand says his inventory won't be worth shit if he tries to sell it all at once. Other than that, I'm not really sure what you're talking about, but if you specify, I could try and answer it for you.

 
Oh its still worth plenty even selling all at once, but not as much as if it were nickel and dimed out. But who the hell is going to take that much time with 4700 lbs? I sure as hell wouldnt.

 
Law of supply and demand says his inventory won't be worth shit if he tries to sell it all at once. Other than that, I'm not really sure what you're talking about, but if you specify, I could try and answer it for you.
I think you misunderstood me. Not his supply. His supply is yes worthless, because he doesn't have it. The ACSD (county) does.

Now what is still out there on the streets, the price of it is going to go up because I can guarantee you that was one of the biggest movers around. So everyone else's supply that was bought at X price, is going to go up because alot of supply has been lost.

Think oil supply + demand. Some oil plant blows up the price of oil goes up because of lost supply. Same concept but green.

 
Oh its still worth plenty even selling all at once, but not as much as if it were nickel and dimed out. But who the hell is going to take that much time with 4700 lbs? I sure as hell wouldnt.
6700 //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif and me either lol.

 
Thankfully i live near VT, NY and Canada! Supply is always around. Why would you speed with all that shit on you. I don't even speed with a 1/8th on me. retards

 
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skeptikal

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