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Dyfed-Powys Police and Crime Commissioner has warned that vacant town centre premises are proving very ‘lucrative’ opportunities for cannabis cultivation, after recent discoveries in Pembrokeshire and Carmarthenshire.
Close to 600 cannabis plants were located during the execution of a warrant at the old Woolworths store building on Dimond Street, Pembroke Dock on Thursday, October 3; whilst the following month on November 4, Dyfed-Powys Police officers executed a further search warrant at a property on the same street, where a large-scale cannabis cultivation set up was located at an address, with more than 500 plants located.
Arrests were made in relation to both investigations.
At a property in Carmarthen town, 930 cannabis plants, with a potential street value of over £870,000 were seized by police, after local officers executed a warrant at a property on King Street, on Wednesday, October 23.
During the warrant, a large hydroponic set up was located; and a thirty-year-old man has been charged with production of controlled drug, class B cannabis, who subsequently appeared at Llanelli Magistrates Court to plead guilty.
On the evening of Wednesday, November 6, Dyfed-Powys Police raided the former Co-operative store on Sycamore Street in Newcastle Emlyn, where officers discovered approximately 435 cannabis plants and growing equipment.
Dyfed-Powys Police and Crime Commissioner Dafydd Llywelyn said that large vacant premises in town centres were proving to present a "very lucrative opportunity” for a cannabis cultivation to be produced in that location, “sort of hidden in plain sight”.
On the Newcastle Emlyn raid, he remarked: “The fact it was very close to the police station just highlights how these organised crime groups are quite brazen.”
Detective Sergeant Richard Saunders said: “Dyfed Powys Police will continue to target those who supply drugs in our community and the related incidents that it brings.”

©Vid: BBC
©Pic: Pixabay

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00:00This is on the rise and we are seeing a couple of these types of facilities
00:04being identified every month, I would suggest, in the David Powers police force
00:08area. It's no different to other police force areas either and it's really
00:13important to get a message out to the public that if you see something that
00:16doesn't look quite right, if an old property is being developed and you have
00:21some suspicions in relation to that, you need to contact the police in order for
00:25us to be able to tackle these incidents that are increasing across the area.

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