Saturday, November 23, 2024

Cannabis farmer was ‘forced into job to repay illegal entry into UK’

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A cannabis gardener who was caught looking after two separate farms, says traffickers threatened his family in Albania, if he didn’t pay back more of the money he owed them.

Oresti Shpata, 32, claims he was “put” into two houses to farm cannabis, so he could pay off £22,000 more rapidly than his work at car washes allowed. Shpata was first caught by police in house in Lancashire, where he had been growing 148 cannabis plants, worth at least £30,000.




Teesside Crown Court has heard that Shpata answered the front door to the police who were acting on a tip-off, on March 29, 2022. The court heard that Shpata, “fled through the house, up onto the loft, before climbing onto the roof and running along neighbouring rooves. He jumped off the roof onto an outhouse. He was chased through allotments before being found in a ditch.”

Paul Abrahams, prosecuting, said that Shpata had also bypassed the electricity supply. “He told police that he had lived at the house for one month. That he had been put here to cultivate cannabis plants and he owed £22,000.”

But months later, after a spell staying in a hotel and working at car washes, Shpata was caught growing another cannabis farm in Middlesbrough. He was till under investigation by the police.

Mr Abrahams told the court that police raided the house after, “drone footage showed a large heat source coming from the property’s roof.” 104 plants were found, with a value of between £30,000 to £89,000, when sold in street deals. There was high powered lighting with reflectors; timers and ventilation set up.

Shpata said he had been “put in the house because of the debt he owed.” The court heard that the Home Office are likely to send Shpata back to Albania, under an agreement the UK reached with the Albanian government, where offences have been committed.

Shpata, of Outram Street in Middlesbrough, admitted producing cannabis. He has no previous convictions. In mitigation, Nicci Horton said that her client had come to the UK illegally “for an extortionate amount of money, to the people who arranged his transport.

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