Police uncovered a farm of 500 cannabis plants during a raid at a disused pub near Harrogate at the weekend.
Officers swooped on the Star and Garter pub at Kirkby Overblow on the morning of Sunday, May 28, where they discovered the “large cannabis production farm”.
A spokesperson for North Yorkshire Police said the plants were at various stages of growth, adding:
“Officers remained at the scene to recover the plants and drug production equipment and to allow crime scene investigators to examine the scene.
“The investigation is ongoing and no arrests have been made at this time.”
Villagers told the Stray Ferret that police were on site for more than 24 hours after the raid and were removing large numbers of plants from the building.
The pub closed several years ago and was boarded up last year.
Police were seen outside the Star and Garter pub from Sunday morning onwards.
Following the raid, North Yorkshire Police has urged people to report any suspicions of properties being used to grow cannabis.
As well as a strong, sweet smell of cannabis in the area, suspicious signs might include blacked out windows and blocked up vents, bright lights throughout the night, high levels of condensation on windows, noise from fans inside the building, and large amounts of rubbish including compost bags.
The police spokesperson added:
“We’re continuously tackling ‘cannabis farms’ – sophisticated set-ups in houses or other properties, used by organised crime gangs to produce several crops of cannabis over time.
“Cannabis production is extremely harmful to communities, and often used to fund criminal gangs involved in human trafficking, sexual exploitation and the distribution of other drugs including cocaine and heroin.
“Furthermore, the electricity supply may have been tampered with (to bypass the meter), creating a high risk of fire – which could spread to neighbouring properties.”
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Harrogate cannabis gardener jailed after £250,000 farm found
A Vietnamese cannabis gardener has been jailed after police found him ensconced in a huge drug factory surrounded by hundreds of marijuana plants worth nearly a quarter of a million pounds.
Manh Nguyen, 18, was arrested at the house in West Lea Avenue, Harrogate, where he had been tending 460 plants inside a sophisticated cannabis factory equipped with irrigation and temperature systems, York Crown Court heard.
Nguyen, of no fixed address, was charged with being concerned in the production of a Class B drug but denied the allegation, claiming he had been trafficked to the UK to work as a cannabis gardener and was a victim of modern slavery.
The teenager was due to face trial today but entered a last-minute guilty plea to the charge, notwithstanding the fact the authorities had found he had been trafficked and was working effectively as a modern slave.
The Crown proceeded straight to sentence knowing that any jail sentence would be negated by the amount of time Nguyen had spent on remand.
Prosecutor Brooke Morrison said police discovered the bumper cannabis harvest on August 11 last year after raiding the property in Harrogate.
She added:
“They found inside a total of 460 cannabis plants spread across the rooms of the house.
“The defendant was the only person present at the property. The cannabis grow is estimated to be worth up to £210,000.
“There was a significant amount of equipment recovered including an irrigation system and temperature controls.
“(Nguyen) was found sleeping on a mattress in the front room. It is essentially accepted that he was a gardener given instructions over the phone to water the plants on a daily basis.
“He was seen by neighbours outside the property but only as far as the front of the garden.”
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She said it was “clear that (Nguyen) was performing a limited role” in the drug enterprise and that he didn’t see a penny of the profits.
Ms Morrison added:
“Clearly, he was a vulnerable young adult and there has been a finding by the (authorities) that he has been trafficked.”
Defence barrister Harry Crowson said Nguyen had come to the UK after being trafficked from Vietnam. He quickly found himself being in debt to his criminal bosses and “taking instructions for a period of time”.
He said that at one stage Nguyen escaped from his criminal bosses and was given social housing, but the criminal gang found him and “brought him back to this same life”.
He said Nguyen’s captors had given him instructions to keep the front garden tidy by cutting the grass, but only gave him a pair of scissors with which to do so.
Mr Crowson said neighbours saw Nguyen performing the pathetic task “either under instruction to keep the grass tidy or because he was in the property with nothing else to occupy his time”.
Mr Crowson added:
“He is very young and came to this country for a better life.”
He said that Nguyen had been on custodial remand since August last year and had already served the equivalent of a one-year-jail sentence.
Used as a ‘modern slave’
Judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, addressed Nguyen through a Vietnamese interpreter and told the teenager:
“It’s quite clear you have been used or (you were) what is termed these days a modern slave.
“You were living on a mattress (and) there is nothing to suggest you (made) any money whatsoever from this criminality.
“It’s a common story that people are hoodwinked into thinking they can get work and they are abused in this way.”
He said that had Nguyen played a “leading role…in this cannabis factory”, he would have given him “as long a sentence as I possibly could”, but that wasn’t the case.
Nguyen received an eight-month jail sentence, but he had already served the equivalent period on remand.
However, the judge warned him:
“Whether you are released from custody will be a matter for the Home Office.”
The court heard that the authorities were looking into Nguyen’s possible deportation.
Photos show how Albanian drugs gang transformed Harrogate home into cannabis farmPolice photos have revealed the scale of a cannabis farm run by an Albanian drugs gang at a Harrogate home owned by landlady Yoko Banks.
Banks, 74, of Scargill Road, was constantly in touch with the drug conspirators but played no active part in the cultivation process.
She was jailed for three-and-a-half years in August 2021 after she admitted three counts of being concerned in the supply of cannabis
Last week she was ordered to repay over £142,333 of illegally earned money under the Proceeds of Crime Act at Leeds Crown Court.
The photos by North Yorkshire Police show how one of her homes on Alexandra Road, close to King’s Road, not far from Harrogate town centre, was completely transformed to cultivate the plants. Even the stairs were covered in cannabis.
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Detective Inspector Janine Mitchell, head of financial investigation at the constabulary, said today:
“The Proceeds of Crime Act allows us to deprive criminals of their illegal income. We will take every opportunity to use the legislation to its capacity to ensure no-one benefits from crime.
“In this case Banks had knowingly rented out high-end Harrogate properties to the organised crime gang in return for thousands of pounds in rental income.
“If you suspect anyone of living off illegally earned income, do not hesitate to call the police. If you don’t want to talk to us, you can report it to Crimestoppers anonymously.”

Cannabis plants propped up in the house on Alexandra Road.

One of the rooms at the house.

The windows were blocked off to prevent people seeing inside.

The cannabis-covered stairs.
The Harrogate district is still the place in North Yorkshire with the highest number of cannabis farms, data from North Yorkshire Police has revealed.
A Freedom of Information (FOI) request showed that between 2016 and 2021, nine major farms with more than 25 plants were discovered in the Harrogate district.
That was almost double the amount found in the Selby district, which was the next highest with five.
This marked a continuation of a trend highlighted two years when an FOI request from the Stray Ferret found that the Harrogate district also had the highest number of cannabis farms then.
Between 2017 and 2020, officers made 22 arrests of people involved with cannabis farms in North Yorkshire.
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Countywide issue
In total over the five-year period between 2016 and 2021, Police recorded 25 crimes relating to cannabis farms across North Yorkshire.
Only two crimes were recorded in 2016/17 and there were three each in 2018/19 and 2019/20.
However, there were nine in 2017/18 and eight in 2020/21.
On average, 323 plants were seized from farms. The largest number recorded was 2,797.
Since the available data ended in 2021, North Yorkshire Police has continued to deal with the issue of large-scale cannabis production in the Harrogate area.
Earlier this year, seven people were jailed for a combined 22 years after Police discovered £450,000-worth of cannabis spread across farms at three properties.
In February, two men were stopped on the A1(M) with 14 kilos of cannabis in their car. They were jailed for two years.
North Yorkshire Police was approached for comment about the latest statistics and why the Harrogate district is so popular with cannabis growers but did not respond.
Seventy three year old woman admits role in Harrogate cannabis farmsA 73 year old former Harrogate guest house owner has admitted her part in cannabis farms worth half a million pounds.
Yoko Banks offered three of her properties to an Albanian gang to grow cannabis with yields of up to £475,000 if sold on the street, Leeds Crown Court heard.
The London-based gang set up three cannabis farms at Banks’s properties on Alexandra Road, Woodlands Road and Somerset Road.
The pensioner and six Albanian men were arrested in September last year when police swooped on three properties on the same day and stopped a van with cannabis inside. The vehicle was thought to be heading for London or the South-East.
Banks, of Scargill Road, was charged with three counts of being concerned in the supply of cannabis on or before September 27 but initially denied the offences. Her trial was due to start this week but on Monday she changed her plea to guilty on all three charges.
The six Albanian men – Kujtim Brahaj, 50, Indrit Brahaj, 27, Visar Sellaj, 33, Bledar Elezaj, 36, Andi Kokaj, 23, and Erblin Elezaj, 33 – had already admitted various charges in relation to the six-figure drug enterprise.
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Prosecutor Martin Bosomworth said it was the Crown’s case that Sellaj and another named man, who was never arrested, were the ringleaders of the mega-money cannabis plot and that Banks, who had been targeted by the gang for her properties, was not actively involved in the growing of the plants, although she had played a “significant”, advisory role.
Her potential profit was said to be limited or “capped”, based on her role as “facilitator” by allowing her premises to be used for the illicit practice.
Each of the seven defendants, including Banks, will be sentenced on Friday.
Mr Bosomworth said that Banks’s role was to “let out these properties knowing what they were used for”.
Banks had a “body of evidence” stacked against her, not least “(telephone) conversations at length” with the unnamed man thought to be the “leading light or middle man in all this”.
Benjamin Whittingham, for Banks, said her involvement in the drug plot was “indirect” and amounted to “facilitating”.
She had previous convictions for health-and-safety offences through her work but nothing drug-related.
The former guest-house owner, who owned “multiple” properties and was said to have numerous bank accounts, had been letting properties to people on benefits.
She had been on bail since her arrest partly for her own safety as it was feared she might be blamed by the gang for the loss of hundreds of thousands of pounds’ worth of drugs.
Indrit Brahaj, of Whitings Road, Barnet; Kokaj, from London but of no fixed address; Sellaj, of Newnham Road, London; and Erblin Elezaj, also from London but of no fixed abode, all admitted being concerned in the production of cannabis and possessing a Class B drug with intent to supply.
Kujtim Brahaj, of Wellington Road, Enfield, and Bledar Elezaj, from London but of no fixed address, each admitted being concerned in the production of cannabis.
Indrit Brahaj was said to be the gang’s driver, making deliveries such as fertilisers to the cannabis factory.
Judge Tom Bayliss QC told Banks:
“You have pleaded guilty to various serious offences but I’m not going to consider sentence until Thursday.”
Each of the six Albanian men had been remanded in custody since their arrest and will remain locked up until they learn their fates later this week.
Cannabis farm ‘under the noses’ of Ripon residentsResidents and businesses in the Juniper Grove area of Ripon have been shocked to find a cannabis farm on their doorstep.
Witnesses, who did not want to be identified, have told the Stray Ferret about the police raid that unearthed the farm.
Officers broke in to unit 6 at Juniper Grove Business Park at around 11am on March 12 and found more than 50 plants on the premises.
A business owner who watched the raid, said:
“The smell that came out of the building when they broke down the door was over-powering.”
They had assumed that legitimate activities were going on behind the roller shutter doors of the unit which had ‘Micro Concrete’ on its signage.
The business owner added:
“With the covid lockdown, everything around here is quiet at the moment, so it came as a bit of a shock when a large number of police suddenly arrived.”

Juniper Grove Business Park, where the police raided a unit being secretly used as a cannabis farm.
A resident, who lives near the eight-unit business park, pointed out:
“It was opened just over two years ago along with a new homes development.
“It’s a former brown field industrial site, that has been transformed and improved through regeneration.”
Another resident added:
“It came as a surprise to see so much police activity.
“Whatever has been going on at the unit, has clearly been happening under our noses.”
Juniper Grove Business Park backs onto Ripon Grammar School in a predominantly residential area of Ripon.
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After the raid, Inspector Alex Langley of North Yorkshire Police, said:
“The damage that drugs cause to individuals and families is significant, and that’s why it’s important we take this pro-active approach to tackle drug issues Ripon.
“The use of industrial units in the Ripon area is of concern as criminals carry out illegal activity in plain sight.
“I would like to ask local business and premises owners to look out for any suspicious activity. Please let us know if something doesn’t feel quite right. The information you provide allows us to carry out this pro-active work in order to try and safeguard our local communities.”
Two men aged 36 and 38. have been arrested in connection with the find and released under investigation pending further enquiries
Woman, 72, in court today on cannabis production chargesA 72-year-old woman from Harrogate will appear in court this morning charged with three counts of cannabis production.
Yoko Banks, of Scargill Road, will be at York Crown Court for a plea and trial preparation hearing this morning.
Should she plead not guilty, a trial date will be set. If she pleads guilty, sentencing will also happen at a future hearing.
Ms Banks was charged following a police incident in central Harrogate on Saturday, September 26.
Officers were called to Alexandra Road, where they said they found “cannabis littering the entire street”. They then investigated a house on the road and discovered a “large quantity” of cannabis plants inside.
Not long after, police also discovered two other cannabis grows on Somerset Road and on Woodlands Road.
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A 72-year-old woman was arrested at the scene. Six other suspects travelling in two vehicles left the scene of the original incident on Alexandra Road, but were later stopped and arrested by Hertfordshire Police.
The six people were charged with possession of class B drugs with intent to supply. They were sent to court, which remanded them in custody.
A man in his 20s was also arrested on September 28 and released on bail, taking the total number of arrests up to eight.