Ct. teachers busted growing. Police give exact details about power consumption

smokinrav

Well-Known Member
I really haven't seen the numbers broken down by LEA before, especially the neighbor comparison. The power use here was vastly higher than neighbors were using. This is the most important thing...

The power company didn't care about the discrepency until LEA asked them.

Bottom line, pay your bill, control your emissions, and tell no one, and you'll be as safe as you can be.

Finally, how much of a grow could you hide in a $174 monthly power bill? I could easily run a 1000 watt perpetual harvest and not crack $150.

======================================================

HARTFORD —

A Northwest Catholic High School teacher's home raided June 12 may have been
part of a wider network of marijuana growing houses, according to a search
warrant released late Monday at Superior Court in Hartford.

Christopher and Kristine Gallagher were arraigned Monday on a host of
marijuana cultivation and possession charges and ordered back to court July 2.
Christopher Gallagher, 40, an English teacher and lacrosse coach for eight years
at the West
Hartford
school, is free on $150,000 bail. His wife, Kristine Gallagher, 44,
was released without having to post bail.

An informant told a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent that he had
been approached about living in a house that would be used for growing
marijuana.
The man who approached the informant, according to the warrant, said
the Gallaghers' home contained one of his growing operations and that Gallagher owed him money.


Acting on that tip, Bloomfield police began an investigation and checked,
among other things, energy consumption for the Gallaghers' home at 17 Sunset
Lane and for several of their neighbors' homes.

While neighboring homes had bills ranging from $40 to $174 a month, the
Gallaghers had bills that ranged from $302 to $634. Police said homes with
growing operations typically have higher electric bills because of the lights
used to grow the plants.


Police and a DEA agent went to the Gallaghers' house about 5:50 a.m. June 12
and reported that they could smell marijuana in the home. Officers knocked on
the door and Christopher Gallagher answered.

DEA Agent Brent Buckles told Gallagher they were there for the "weed grow."
Gallagher acted oblivious for a moment, then responded, "well obviously,"
according to the search warrant affidavit. "Christopher Gallagher then expressed
concern about his employer finding out," according to the affidavit.

Police called to Kristine Gallagher to come out, but they said she was slow
to respond. Officers went into the house because, according to affidavit, they
"believed Kristine maybe accessing a weapon or destroying evidence within the
residence." Before they could get far, Kristine Gallagher appeared at the door
and escorted the officers around the house, according to the affidavit.

After that initial contact with the Gallaghers, Bloomfield police obtained a
search warrant for the house. They reported finding $2,200 in cash, 119
suspected marijuana plants that weighed 12 1/4 pounds, scales, growing lights,
fertilizers, cultivation materials, three guns, a white powder/rock substance in
a bag, and drug paraphernalia.

The warrant also says the Gallaghers have five pit bull terriers in their
home, but Hartford attorney William Gerace said police exaggerated.

"They had two American bulldogs and three puppies," said Gerace, who is
representing Christopher Gallagher. "They juiced it up a little bit," he said of
the search warrant.

Hartford attorney Gerald Klein, who is representing Kristine Gallagher, said
the case against his client is weak and at Monday's arraignment of the couple he
filed a motion to dismiss the charges against her for lack of evidence.

Gerace said Monday that Gallagher and his wife have taken an unfair beating
in the media.

"They didn't find any dead bodies in the house," he said. "People have blown
this out of proportion."

Gallagher "is a good guy" and neither he nor his wife have records, Gerace
said.

"They've got a witch hunt on for these people," he said. "It's kind of
unfair. There's no allegation it has anything to do with the school. It's
marijuana."

Christopher Gallagher is on "indefinite administrative leave," Principal
Margaret R. Williamson said last week.

Klein said Kristine Gallagher was arrested without a warrant and there's no
indication she was a target.

"I don't see any evidence that links her to a crime," Klein said. She is only
peripherally mentioned in paperwork related to the case, he said.

The state needs to prove she conspired with or aided and abetted her husband,
Klein said. "There's no duty to turn someone in," he said.

Both are charged with conspiracy to sell a controlled substance, conspiracy
to operate a drug factory, conspiracy to sell illegal drugs, and other
charges.
 

growone

Well-Known Member
but it's the snitch that makes it happen
hard to know what's true or not, DEA will pump out any number of lies if they feel the need
but snitch sounds right, 90%+ of the busted threads are about someone calling the police, then the investigation begins(maybe)
 

born2killspam

Well-Known Member
Agreed, it costs man-hours to report these things to police, or to write a program to automate suspicious usage reports, and the power company loses billable usage to boot.. I know a few ppl in pretty high ranking positions within the power company here.. The office guys all say that the police only get called if they suspect power theft, and the line workers all say that it would take some significant power theft to get noticed, except when ppl end up dead trying to steal it..
 

born2killspam

Well-Known Member
119 plants? They deserved it. YEA I SAID IT. They were obviously selling.
Coupling that logic, with the hostility towards ppl who grow in rental places, only ppl who can afford to buy a house should be allowed to smoke weed.. You must be one of those 1%er eliitist dicks who skirt the federal/state laws by growing your weed on your yachts in international waters..
 

snew

Well-Known Member
Coupling that logic, with the hostility towards ppl who grow in rental places, only ppl who can afford to buy a house should be allowed to smoke weed.. You must be one of those 1%er eliitist dicks who skirt the federal/state laws by growing your weed on your yachts in international waters..
If I rented a house to someone and found out they where growing on my property you would have to worry about cop but you might not walk so well. When you get busted who has to pay to undo all you shit. Fix damages from the police, losses rent while fixing things. "One of 1%er eliitist dicks" who doesn't worked hard for everything. Grow in another mans home and get what you deserve.
 

bluntmassa1

Well-Known Member
thats why if your renting out you house you can get insurance if you don't its your problem. just cause you grow in an apartment you should go down? fuck that its illegal one way or the other even medical I would'nt care if someone grew in my rental as long as they didn't tell me. you say they deserve it what if you go down? to a cop your just as bad if not worse for growing in a nice house you own and these pepole are helping us fight the war on drugs their are freinds not the rich fucks with a bunch of rental properties they can handle a loss their loaded
If I rented a house to someone and found out they where growing on my property you would have to worry about cop but you might not walk so well. When you get busted who has to pay to undo all you shit. Fix damages from the police, losses rent while fixing things. "One of 1%er eliitist dicks" who doesn't worked hard for everything. Grow in another mans home and get what you deserve.
 

Cloudz2600

Well-Known Member
Explain to me why someone needs to grow 119 plants.
I don't live in a MMJ state, but am I wrong in assuming you have to have a license to smoke it legally? If so I doubt everyone in the state has one. You act like everyone can go to to their local dispensary and pick up an 1/8th.
 

Cut.Throat.

Well-Known Member
I don't live in a MMJ state, but am I wrong in assuming you have to have a license to smoke it legally? If so I doubt everyone in the state has one. You act like everyone can go to to their local dispensary and pick up an 1/8th.
Not a single person in this entire country can smoke/grow marijuana legally. They think they can. But they can't.

Not saying we shouldn't break the law for personal consumption. But there's no reason to grow 119 plants.
 

Cloudz2600

Well-Known Member
Yes, yes we all know it's against the law federally. You're basically saying there's no point in any of the progress we made for legalization because it's still illegal federally. That's not the point. So let me ask this then, if they were growing with the intent to distribute and indeed did. What's wrong with that? They saw a way to make money, not hurting anyone by providing a product that people want.
 

Corso312

Well-Known Member
Don't get me wrong. I think we should be able to grow 1000 plants. But we can't. And it's busts like these that knock us back a couple steps making it even harder to get it full legal.


you are wrong...busts like that are the reasons why state by state the laws are changing..2 people with no criminal history, not bothering anyone tying up the court dockets....the plan is to overgrow the government, they were doing their job.,,what are you doing? those people do not make anyone "look bad" if weed was hard to grow it would be legal and taxed like cigs...money is the only reason why it is illegal..not because anyone is growing 119 plants, and for you to say they deserve to be in jail is fucking ignorant.
 

Cut.Throat.

Well-Known Member
Yes, yes we all know it's against the law federally. That's not the point. So let me ask this then, if they were growing with the intent to distribute and indeed did. What's wrong with that?
Nothing really. Just like there's nothing wrong with them getting arrested. They knew it was a crime. They got busted.

Truthfully it's probably because I'm jealous I can't be a uber cool drug dealer like them.
 

Cloudz2600

Well-Known Member
Nothing really. Just like there's nothing wrong with them getting arrested. They knew it was a crime. They got busted.

Truthfully it's probably because I'm jealous I can't be a uber cool drug dealer like them.
Not sure if serious...By your logic we're all criminals and should be arrested. Oh well if anything responding increases my post count lol. :)
 

Cloudz2600

Well-Known Member
Welp I guess that means I would of never smoked weed before considering all my weed so far has been bought by a dealer who in turn got it from a grower...I'm sure you're just a bad troll though, no one can actually be that retarded.
 
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