Sunday, April 22, 2007

Diamond Bar Birthday Celebration Today


City's 18th Birthday Celebration


Location:Pantera Park 738 Pantera Drive
Diamond Bar, California 91765


Sunday April 22, 2007 Today!


Join us in celebrating 18 years of incorporation on Sunday, April 22, 2007 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Pantera Park, 738 Pantera Drive, Diamond Bar. Attention non-profit service organizations! If you are seeking a fun way to raise funds for your group, why not participate as a food vendor, game booth operator, carnival ride operator, or bring awareness to the community about your organization with an information booth.


For more information or to receive a vendor application, please contact the following: Car Show, Craft Fair, Food Booth, Game Booth, Carnival Ride Booth, or Information Booth: Andee Tarazon with Diamond Bar Community Services at 909.839.7067




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KFWB Reports:Investigators to Probe Link Between Another Seizure Miles Away


http://kfwb.com/pages/326960.php?contentType=4&contentId=391527


DIAMOND BAR - Authorities today seized nearly $10 million worth of marijuana being grown inside a four-bedroom home in Diamond Bar that was being used as a pot greenhouse.


Detectives arrested 27-year-old Tommy Wong on suspicion of unlawful cultivation of marijuana after narcotics investigators confiscated almost two-thousand plants in every part of the house along with lights, an irrigation system and other equipment used to cultivate marijuana.


The raid comes a week after investigators seized about $12.5 million worth of pot found inside a sprawling, seven-bedroom home several miles away in Diamond Bar.


Detectives were trying to determine whether there was a link between the two pot-growing operations. One official said that because of the amount of plants seized, it's possible this could be part of a larger-scale operation taking place in other affluent neighborhoods in the area.




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Friday, April 20, 2007

In quiet suburbs, neighbors are watching again


Pot busts have residents weighing privacy against a need to know.

By Tony Barboza and Megan Garvey, Times Staff Writers
April 20, 2007 http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-suburbpot20apr20,1,787734.story


Crime and danger seemed so removed from one family-friendly hillside community in Diamond Bar, the local Neighborhood Watch disbanded out of lack of need.

Or so its members thought.

This week, the same neighbors who let crime-watching efforts lapse were jarred by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies descending on a two-story, red-tiled-roof home where manicured pink roses lined the walkway and the quiet new neighbors had seldom been seen.

As other homeowners looked on, deputies removed nearly 1,000 marijuana plants from the gutted home, where the bathrooms had been converted into storage space, interior walls had been removed and the electricity powering the massive growing operation had been routed directly from power lines, stealing kilowatts.

The operation was one of a dozen uncovered in the last month in normally quiet, upscale suburbs in or near the eastern San Gabriel Valley. The discoveries, which have yielded 10 arrests and more than 12,000 plants, have shaken the communities, prompting residents to question the long-held practice of respecting neighbors' privacy as long as they do the same.

"We have to go back to knocking on doors and taking flowers to our new neighbors," said Paulette Horton of Diamond Bar, who lives down the street from the formerly thriving criminal enterprise. "From now on, we're going to introduce ourselves to whoever's out in front of an empty house."

The pot busts have residents suddenly scrutinizing neighbors and calling police on newfound suspicions: a dry lawn, no bins out on trash day, windows that never open, a faint - or not so faint - smell of "skunk" in the air.

"Now I'm driving around thinking, 'Whose shades are closed?' " said Mehrbanoo Ostowari, 41, a 15-year Diamond Bar resident who was walking her miniature poodle at a neighborhood park. Part of the problem, she said, is a culture that may value privacy over interaction with neighbors.

"All people do is drive up, open up their garage, close it and go inside," she said.

For marijuana entrepreneurs, suburbia appears to be an increasingly desirable hiding spot for just those reasons.

"It seems like they're picking neighborhoods that are fairly nice - some of them very nice - where neighbors are friendly but not overly involved," said Lt. Jim Whitten of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Narcotics Bureau. "People are so busy with their lives coming and going they think they just won't be noticed, and it worked for a while, and it's probably still working in some places."

California has seen almost a quadrupling of indoor pot plants seized in the last three years, from at least 54,000 plants to nearly 200,000 in 2006. Last year, authorities shut down 50 home pot farms in Sacramento, Modesto and Stockton. Federal drug investigators tied those operations to a San Francisco-based Vietnamese crime ring.

The Los Angeles-area cases have strong similarities: recently purchased and spacious suburban homes converted into large-scale growing complexes; and illegally rerouted electrical wires that tapped directly into supply lines, avoiding huge power bills that might have attracted attention. Of the 10 people recently arrested, all but two were Asian, leading law enforcement officials to suspect a possible connection to Asian organized crime.

The houses, which often had attached garages, made it easy for growers to bring supplies in and out without their neighbors knowing. And each site used hydroponic technology - growing plants without soil. In some cases, sophisticated ventilation systems were installed to diffuse the strong odors from the plants.

At one home, sheriff's officials said a false foyer was built, shielding the view of the unconventional remodeling should anyone knock on the door.

The first major discovery was made March 14 - purely by chance. An electrical fire from an overloaded panel brought emergency crews to a spacious, peach-hued Chino Hills home.

Inside, firefighters found about 1,300 marijuana plants.

Susan Jabs, who lives next door, said she had no idea the two young Asian men who were fixing up the house were actually converting it into a massive indoor pot farm. The men would wave to her family. They even had a gardener.

When Jabs' family asked them about building a fence between their backyards, they didn't respond because they didn't speak English.

"We thought it was a language barrier," she said. "We were just grateful to have quiet neighbors."



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Another pot house found in Diamond Bar


The indoor farm is found amid million-dollar homes, where houses that are too quiet now attract attention.


By Richard Winton and Tony Barboza, Times Staff Writers
April 17, 2007




Authorities on Monday discovered an eighth huge marijuana-harvesting center in an upscale home in the eastern San Gabriel Valley suburbs, with some officials wondering whether the pot ring is getting more sophisticated.

The latest pot house was found amid million-dollar homes on Farben Drive in Diamond Bar, a suburb about 30 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.

The criminal ring that ran the house made sure to keep the lawn and garden well manicured, and neighbors said they had no idea the house was being used to grow drugs.

"It is a very, very nice home in an upscale neighborhood with two whole stories dedicated to marijuana," said Lt. Jim Whitten of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Narcotics Bureau. "Typically these homes have lawns that are untended. It is one of the signs we tell people to look for. But in this case it was a nice, well-kept lawn. But with all the publicity, people are beginning to notice these homes."

L.A. County Sheriff's officials have been stunned by the amount of pot found in Diamond Bar and surrounding suburbs in the last few months - with estimates approaching a value of $50 million. Detectives believe the houses might be tied to an Asian organized crime ring.

Frustrated city leaders are wondering when it will end.

"We have already found three more of these than we thought there were in our quiet town," said Diamond Bar Mayor Steve Tye. "By the time we hit five or six, or double digits, these people will get the picture. I don't see how a business can afford to take that many hits before they close up shop and decide to try another business model."

The recent pot raids have made some homeowners, who might otherwise be grateful to live on a quiet street, instead suspicious when a neighbor's house is too quiet.

"What's not going on that should be going on?" asked Tye. "If there are no kids being taken to school, if homeowners are not coming and going, that's now cause for concern."

Lillian Ferguson, 49, who lives across the street from the most recently discovered house, said she's now considering reconvening the Neighborhood Watch group in light of the raid.

"They were pretty quiet neighbors," she said of the occupants of the house at 742 Farben Drive, a two-story stucco building with wood facing that was sold six or seven months ago. "We would just see a couple Asian men come in and out, but they didn't call any attention to themselves. Everybody on the block's just blown away."

A suspicious-looking man sitting in a Ford Mustang at midday Monday, who later turned out to be an undercover police officer staging the raid, aroused more suspicion than the pot house, she said.

The home, like others, was refitted to allow for a state-of-the-art heating and lighting system to nurture the crop.

As investigators began their search, two men arrived at the home in rapid succession and were arrested on suspicion of cultivating marijuana, Whitten said.

Authorities identified the men as Ken Ho, 27, and Chuan Zhou, 42. Each was being held in lieu of $50,000 bail.

According to law enforcement officials, California is in the midst of a major boom in large-scale marijuana cultivation operations run from inside homes, with authorities confiscating more than $100 million worth of pot in the last year alone.

Authorities are trying to determine whether the Southern California busts are connected to a similar suburban pot business in Northern California uncovered last year. That operation was tied to an Asian organized crime group based in San Francisco's Chinatown, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency said.

Three pot-farm homes in Diamond Bar, two in Rowland Heights, one in Chino Hills and one in Pomona have been found. Officials made at least six arrests in connection with those houses.

Seizures in middle-class and upscale suburbs have occurred as pot growers have taken advantage of cheap home financing and minimal credit checks to purchase homes and remodel them into sophisticated farms for quick profits.

Although indoor plants are smaller than their outdoor counterparts, they can be harvested more frequently, so they yield a similar quantity.



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2 Arrested In Diamond Bar Pot Bust


Apr 20, 2007 7:42 am US/Pacific http://cbs2.com/topstories/local_story_110104757.html


VIDEO: Watch The Latest News SLIDESHOWS: View The Day's Top Photos


(CBS) DIAMOND BAR, Calif. Two men were arrested in connection with the discovery of the fourth home-based marijuana growing operation in Diamond Bar in the past month, authorities said Friday.

The suspects were identified as Ze Ning Peng, 41, and Ze Lin Peng, 49, said Sgt. Duane Allen of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.

A search warrant was served at a home on the 1100 block of Seneca Place at 5 p.m. Wednesday, then detectives seized 1,533 marijuana plants with an estimated street value of up to $6,000 each, Castro said.

According to the San Gabriel Valley Tribune, investigators found the two suspects dismantling a marijuana farm inside the four-bedroom home when deputies served the search warrant, and arrested them on suspicion of cultivation of marijuana and theft of electricity.

The entire house was being used as an indoor marijuana cultivation site, Castro said.

Los Angeles County Sheriffs deputies discovered marijuana growing operations in three other homes in Diamond Bar on March 21, March 28 and Monday; four in Rowland Heights and one in Rosemead. Pomona police discovered a similar operation in that city on April 1.






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Golf course decision on hold Diamond Bar to seek more input on possible commercial center


Golf course decision on hold


Diamond Bar to seek more input on possible commercial center


By Caroline An, Staff Writer - Article Launched: 04/19/2007 12:00:00 AM PDT



DIAMOND BAR - A next step in a move to turn the Diamond Bar Golf Course into a commercial center has been delayed by the City Council.

The council on Tuesday night held off approving more than $450,000 for an environmental study until its next meeting to get more citizen input on the idea.


Since the early 1990s, the city has eyed the Los Angeles County-owned course, along the 60 and 57 freeways, as a site for more retail and a city park, fulfilling residents' requests for more recreation space, said Mayor Steve Tye.


The city's fiscal year goals include producing a plan to turn the course into a center that would include a movie theater, restaurants and stores.


City officials said at Tuesday's meeting that a final decision about the golf course's future has not been made.


But residents said spending more than $450,000 for an environmental study makes it appear that the city had already decided on the development.


"It is a lot of money when no decision is made," said Martin Pastucha.


Allen Wilson, who lives near the golf course, was open to development but urged the city to look at improving existing shopping centers.


"My quality of life is more important than retail," Wilson said.


Other residents, including Lori Pastucha, were concerned about the city's attempts at community outreach and questioned why a decision on creating a study was necessary Tuesday, when a community forum was scheduled for the weekend.


Council members agreed that delaying a decision until a May 1 meeting would give the public a chance "to weigh in," Tye said.


"I encourage people to come forward," he said. "I want to put to bed the contention that the deal is done."


Councilman Wen Chang said he understands residents' concerns but that the council has to look "at the interests of the 60,000 people in Diamond Bar."


Having the city taking more of an active role instead of a developer "who will take the benefits in their pocket and go" will benefit residents for generations to come, Chang said.


Providing more retail is a priority, city officials have said.


After a year that saw the completion of the Target center - the city's largest commercial development in more than a decade - and the approval of a new Kaiser Permanente medical facility, Tye said in his state of the city address that the council "remains committed to securing additional commercial development that meshes with our community's values."


The 6,801-yard, par-72 course, which attracts players from throughout the area, has been open since 1964 and is operated for the county by American Golf Corp. The facility also includes a large banquet facility.


A golf course could still be located in the city, Tye said, with possible locations including the proposed Aera Energy project or in an undeveloped area between Chino Hills and Diamond Bar.


Staff writer Caroline An can be reached by e-mail at caroline.an@sgvn.com or by calling (626) 962-8811, Ext. 2108.





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Thursday, April 19, 2007

Are We Having Fun Yet? Fourth Diamond Bar Pot House Discovered


http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/news/state/article_1663232.php


Fourth Diamond Bar pot house discovered


Marijuana operation is seven in the region uncovered in the last month.


City News Service -April 19, 2006


DIAMOND BAR -- A Diamond Bar home-based marijuana growing operation was discovered Wednesday, authorities said, at least the fourth in the city and seventh in Los Angeles County discovered in the past month.


Sheriff's detectives seized more than 1,000 marijuana plants valued around $9.2 million from the two-story home on the 1100 block of Seneca Place, according to Dep. Luis Castro of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.


A search warrant was served at the home at 5 this afternoon, then detectives seized 1,533 marijuana plants with an estimated street value of up to $6,000 each, Castro said. [Editorial Note: About $9.2Million.]


The entire house was being used as an indoor marijuana cultivation site, Castro said.


Marijuana growing operations were also discovered in homes in Diamond Bar on March 21, March 28 and Monday; in Pomona on April 1; and in Rowland Heights on April 4 and April 11.


[Editorial Note: Call the Sheriff's Station if you think you see something. stop by the Walnut/Diamond Bar Station at 21695 E. Valley Boulevard, Walnut (Grand Ave and Valley Blvd, just turn right at the light on left side of the street.) 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, or call (909) 595-2264.]




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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

DB City News: Diamond Bar Library Temporarily Closed April 23 - May 5


Diamond Bar Library Temporarily Closed

Date: 4/23/2007 - 5/5/2007


Location: Diamond Bar Library
1061 S. Grand Avenue
Diamond Bar, California 91765



The Diamond Bar Library will be closed for major refurbishment from Monday, April 23 through Saturday, May 5, 2007. Library will reopen on May 7.


Alternate locations:



  • Walnut Library, 21155 La Puente Road, Walnut

  • Rowland Heights Library, 1850 Nogales Street, Rowland Heights


During closure, customers may return library materials to the Diamond Bar Library outside book drop or to any other County Library.


For more information, call 909-861-4978 or visit www.colapublib.org/libs/diamondbar





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Next City Council Meeting: Tuesday April 17 6:30PM AQMD


City Council Meeting



Date: 4/17/2007 6:30 PM

Location: AQMD/Government Center, Auditorium
21865 Copley Drive
Diamond Bar, California 91765



The Diamond Bar City Council meetings are held on the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of every month at 6:30 p.m. and are broadcast live on DBTV Time-Warner Cable Channel 3. The meetings are rebroadcast on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. and Saturdays at 9 a.m. City Council meetings are open to the public, and residents are encouraged to address the Council on matters of importance.


For more information, contact the City Clerk's office at (909) 839-7000 or email at CityClerk@ci.diamond-bar.ca.us.





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Good News: Free Sports Injury Screenings at Casa Colina


Free sports injury screenings at Casa Colina


Article Launched: http://www.dailybulletin.com/pomona/ci_5650133 04/12/2007 11:00:00 PM PDT


Casa Colina Hospital is offers free sports injury screenings every Sunday morning (with the exception of legal holidays) at its Sports Medicine Center, 255 E. Bonita Ave., Pomona. The free screenings will be held from 9 a.m. to noon, however all athletes must check in prior to 11:30 a.m.


Free screenings include examination by a board-certified physician, free physical therapist and/or athletic trainer assessment, and free x-ray services, if required. All screenings are performed at Casa Colina's sports medicine complex with indoor and outdoor athletic gyms, running track, batting cage, aquatic therapy center and an adjacent diagnostic imaging and surgery center.


Only sports injuries will be seen during the Sunday morning screenings - no work-related or other injuries. Appointments will not be scheduled for Sunday mornings - walk-ins only please.


For more information, please call (909) 450-0325.


- Information courtesy of Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation





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North County Times: 1,000 pot plants seized


http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/04/17/news/state/16_39_144_16_07.txt


1,000 pot plants seized


By: North County Times wire services -


DIAMOND BAR - Sheriff's narcotics officers discovered nearly 1,000 marijuana plants valued at $5.9 million inside a Diamond Bar home Monday, in the sixth home-based marijuana growing operation discovered in Los Angeles County in the past month.


Detectives from the Sheriff's Headquarters Narcotic Bureau and the Walnut Sheriff's Station served a search warrant at a single-story home in the 700 block of Farben Drive at 1:45 p.m., said sheriff's Sgt. Don Manumaleuna.


Authorities found 985 plants, each with an estimated street value of $6,000, he said.


No arrests were made, according to Deputy Luis Castro.


Marijuana growing operations were discovered in homes in Diamond Bar on March 21 and March 28; in Pomona on April 1; and in Rowland Heights on April 4 and April 11.




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The City of Diamond Bar, CA Celebrates 18 Years of Incorporation


Diamond Bar, CA - On Sunday, April 22, 2007, the City of Diamond Bar will celebrate its 18th year of incorporation with a community birthday party. Everyone is invited to attend the celebration located at Pantera Park, 738 Pantera Drive from 12 - 6 pm. The theme of this year's event, the "Spirit of Diamond Bar," celebrates the diversity which is an integral part of Diamond Bar.

The event brings together residents, businesses, and elected officials of Diamond Bar and the surrounding communities for a day of fun-filled activities. The day's events include a car show, craft fair, business showcase, and safety display. The festivities will also include carnival rides, food court, games, community information booths and local entertainment.


Also as part of the day's festivities, this year's honoree(s) of Diamond Bar's annual
Outstanding Volunteer Recognition program will be announced. The City Council will honor those volunteers, who have demonstrated their dedication to the community, with a special award.

For more information, contact the Recreation Department at 909.839.7070.





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Good News: Free Sports Injury Screenings at Casa Colina


Free sports injury screenings at Casa Colina


Article Launched: http://www.dailybulletin.com/pomona/ci_5650133 04/12/2007 11:00:00 PM PDT


Casa Colina Hospital is offers free sports injury screenings every Sunday morning (with the exception of legal holidays) at its Sports Medicine Center, 255 E. Bonita Ave., Pomona. The free screenings will be held from 9 a.m. to noon, however all athletes must check in prior to 11:30 a.m.


Free screenings include examination by a board-certified physician, free physical therapist and/or athletic trainer assessment, and free x-ray services, if required. All screenings are performed at Casa Colina's sports medicine complex with indoor and outdoor athletic gyms, running track, batting cage, aquatic therapy center and an adjacent diagnostic imaging and surgery center.


Only sports injuries will be seen during the Sunday morning screenings - no work-related or other injuries. Appointments will not be scheduled for Sunday mornings - walk-ins only please.


For more information, please call (909) 450-0325.


- Information courtesy of Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation





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ABC7: Pot-Growing Operation Discovered in Diamond Bar House


http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=local&id=5215820 With Video

6th Home-Based Operation Busted in L.A. County in a Month

- Sheriff's narcotics officers discovered nearly 1,000 marijuana plants valued at $5.9 million inside a Diamond Bar home Monday, in the sixth home-based marijuana growing operation discovered in Los Angeles County in the past month.

Detectives from the Sheriff's Headquarters Narcotic Bureau and the Walnut Sheriff's Station served a search warrant at a single-story home in the 700 block of Farben Drive at 1:45 p.m., said sheriff's Sgt. Don Manumaleuna.

Authorities found 985 plants, each with an estimated street value of $6,000, he said.

No arrests were made, according to Deputy Luis Castro.

Marijuana growing operations were discovered in homes in Diamond Bar on March 21 and March 28; in Pomona on April 1; and in Rowland Heights on April 4 and April 11.

NBC4 TV News: Seizure In Diamond Bar Nets Nearly 1,000 Marijuana Plants

http://www.nbc4.tv/news/12202126/detail.html
POSTED: 3:58 pm PDT April 16, 2007 & UPDATED: 6:56 pm PDT April 16, 2007

LOS ANGELES -- Sheriff's narcotics officers and detectives have found 985 marijuana plants, with an estimated street value of $5.9 million, growing inside a house in the 700 block of Farben Drive in Diamond Bar.


The discovery marks the third marijuana seizure within five weeks in Diamond Bar.


On March 28, detectives seized 1,868 marijuana plants growing in an upscale home in Diamond Bar. The plants had an estimated street-sale value of nearly $10 million, according to investigators.


Photos at http://www.nbc4.tv/slideshow/news/12203687/detail.html

Earlier last month, sheriff's narcotics officers raided another home in Diamond Bar and confiscated an estimated $12.5 million worth of marijuana.

At least 10 raids have been conducted recently by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration in Northern California at homes in upscale suburbs like Diamond Bar, authorities said.

No arrests were made in the most recent seizure, according to Deputy Luis Castro.


March 28, 2007: Nearly 2,000 Marijuana Plants Seized At Diamond Bar Home
March 21, 2007: Officers: $12.5M In Marijuana Confiscated In Diamond Bar

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LA Times Reports: Another pot house found in Diamond Bar


http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pothouse17apr17,0,543906.story?coll=la-home-local


The indoor farm is found amid million-dollar homes, where houses that are too quiet now attract attention.


By Richard Winton and Tony Barboza - Times Staff Writers - April 17, 2007


Authorities on Monday discovered an eighth huge marijuana-harvesting center in an upscale home in the eastern San Gabriel Valley suburbs, {Diamond Bar] with some officials wondering whether the pot ring is getting more sophisticated.


The latest pot house was found amid million-dollar homes on Farben Drive in Diamond Bar, a suburb about 30 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.


The criminal ring that ran the house made sure to keep the lawn and garden well manicured, and neighbors said they had no idea the house was being used to grow drugs.


"It is a very, very nice home in an upscale neighborhood with two whole stories dedicated to marijuana," said Lt. Jim Whitten of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Narcotics Bureau. "Typically these homes have lawns that are untended. It is one of the signs we tell people to look for. But in this case it was a nice, well-kept lawn. But with all the publicity, people are beginning to notice these homes."


L.A. County Sheriff's officials have been stunned by the amount of pot found in Diamond Bar and surrounding suburbs in the last few months - with estimates approaching a value of $50 million. Detectives believe the houses might be tied to an Asian organized crime ring.


Frustrated city leaders are wondering when it will end.


"We have already found three more of these than we thought there were in our quiet town," said Diamond Bar Mayor Steve Tye. "By the time we hit five or six, or double digits, these people will get the picture. I don't see how a business can afford to take that many hits before they close up shop and decide to try another business model."


The recent pot raids have made some homeowners, who might otherwise be grateful to live on a quiet street, instead suspicious when a neighbor's house is too quiet.


"What's not going on that should be going on?" asked Tye. "If there are no kids being taken to school, if homeowners are not coming and going, that's now cause for concern."


Lillian Ferguson, 49, who lives across the street from the most recently discovered house, said she's now considering reconvening the Neighborhood Watch group in light of the raid.


"They were pretty quiet neighbors," she said of the occupants of the house at 742 Farben Drive, a two-story stucco building with wood facing that was sold six or seven months ago. "We would just see a couple Asian men come in and out, but they didn't call any attention to themselves. Everybody on the block's just blown away."


A suspicious-looking man sitting in a Ford Mustang at midday Monday, who later turned out to be an undercover police officer staging the raid, aroused more suspicion than the pot house, she said.


The home, like others, was refitted to allow for a state-of-the-art heating and lighting system to nurture the crop.


As investigators began their search, two men arrived at the home in rapid succession and were arrested on suspicion of cultivating marijuana, Whitten said.


Authorities identified the men as Ken Ho, 27, and Chuan Zhou, 42. Each was being held in lieu of $50,000 bail.


According to law enforcement officials, California is in the midst of a major boom in large-scale marijuana cultivation operations run from inside homes, with authorities confiscating more than $100 million worth of pot in the last year alone.


Authorities are trying to determine whether the Southern California busts are connected to a similar suburban pot business in Northern California uncovered last year. That operation was tied to an Asian organized crime group based in San Francisco's Chinatown, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency said.


Three pot-farm homes in Diamond Bar, two in Rowland Heights, one in Chino Hills and one in Pomona have been found. Officials made at least six arrests in connection with those houses.


Seizures in middle-class and upscale suburbs have occurred as pot growers have taken advantage of cheap home financing and minimal credit checks to purchase homes and remodel them into sophisticated farms for quick profits.


Although indoor plants are smaller than their outdoor counterparts, they can be harvested more frequently, so they yield a similar quantity


richard.winton@latimes.com & tony.barboza@latimes.com




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Another Pot Bust in Diamond Bar


Another indoor pot farm busted


By Bethania Palma and Caroline An, Staff Writers
http://www.sgvtribune.com/news/ci_5683905




DIAMOND BAR - Narcotics officers discovered hundreds of marijuana plants Monday inside a house in a residential neighborhood.


The find was similar to several others previously made in Rowland Heights, Diamond Bar, Chino Hills and Pomona. As in those cases, the house on Farben Drive had been gutted to make room for the indoor farm, and no one lived inside.


Los Angeles sheriff's narcotics authorities raided the home at 742 Farben Drive, Diamond Bar, CA about 2p.m. and found 985 high-potency plants valued at nearly $6 million.


Authorities arrested Ken Ho, 26, and Chuan Zhou, 42 at the scene on suspicion of cultivating marijuana.


Sheriff's Lt. James Whitten said investigators were tipped off by a neighbor "within the last week." He said authorities are looking into whether the house "is connected to the others we've been investigating." This is the eighth indoor pot bust locally in less than a month. Since March 21, authorities have found two houses in Diamond Bar, three in Rowland Heights, one in Chino Hills and one in Pomona.


[Ed. Note: This makes THREE in Diamond Bar.]


Many neighbors in the quiet, hilly neighborhood said the house has changed hands numerous times in recent years, but nothing of the yellow-and-white, two-story home alerted them to illegal activity.


The sprinklers and lights were on a timer, and a gardener came every Saturday afternoon, they said.


Inside the house, a pungent smell of marijuana plants hung in the air, even though investigators had removed the plants hours earlier.


Wires hung from the ceiling and dozens of electrical outlets were attached to the wall. As in the other houses, the wires that fed powerful, 1,000-watt grow lights, fans and generators had been rigged to bypass Southern California Edison meters.


Though the windows of the home were covered by curtains or plastic tarpaulins to block the view from the outside, Whitten pointed to a light that had been placed under a window that was timed to turn on and give the appearance of someone being inside the vacant home.


Kathleen Nolan said the fact that this occurred across the street from her house came as a shock, especially with two police officers who live in the area.


"You just never would have guessed it," Nolan said.


Bill Dennis, who has lived on Farben Street for five years, said the three young men who moved into the home in fall of 2005, and whom Dennis helped install the garage door, were excellent neighbors.


Plants and shrubs were regularly maintained and the house's exterior was repainted last week, he said.


Other neighbors said that they rarely saw anyone home.






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Sunday, April 8, 2007

Pre-dyed eggs ease Easter Bunny's load


By Alison Hewitt, Staff Writer - San Gabriel Valley Tribune



Dying Easter eggs may be a time-honored tradition, but for community egg hunts involving thousands of eggs, honoring tradition can be a daunting prospect.


That's why Glendora is turning to something new: pre-decorated egg suppliers.


"We're one of the last cities that still use real eggs, instead of going over to the plastic eggs," recreation supervisor Annie Warner said. "It used to be a lot of work to dye all the eggs, but now we buy them already dyed. That's really nice."


The 6,000 eggs for Saturday's Easter egg hunt arrived Thursday at Glendora's Sellers Elementary School, where 30 crates were packed into one of the cafeteria's walk-in freezers.


"In the old days, we actually used to boil them for the city," said Michelle Curry, the school's director of food services. "We just can't do that anymore. It was like, two days of one employee boiling eggs."


The Easter Bunny's secret backup is an egg factory in Riverside County. Golden Oval Eggs Co. spends most of the year making pre-shelled, hard-boiled eggs for restaurants (think Cobb salad) and grocery stores. But come Easter, some of their boiling vats become dying vats, where hard-boiled eggs are submerged and dyed one of six vibrant colors, marketing manager Henry Markowicz said.


"The trick is to be able to do a large amount of eggs without breaking them," he said. "It goes back to all of us wanting convenience and tradition. People don't have time to decorate."


The factory produces about 25,000 Easter eggs daily, Markowicz said, for a total of a half-million this season.


Glendora bought the eggs via Gelson's supermarket, which supplies them in crates of 180 eggs, or in individual packs of a dozen for anyone to buy as part of their grocery shopping.


But not everyone's turning to the automated Easter Bunny for their weekend egg hunts.


In Azusa, about 150 children on a youth baseball league dyed 900 real eggs. In Diamond Bar, the city purchased 11,000 plastic, toy-and-


candy-filled eggs. A West Covina church will fill 15,000 eggs with candy, La Puente has 8,000 plastic eggs, and San Dimas had more than 3,000 plastic eggs scattered among chocolate eggs at its hunt last week.


While some egg hunt organizers said the labor involved in boiling and decorating thousands of eggs was the reason to turn to plastic, others said plastic, treat-filled eggs were better.


"We used to do real eggs," said Diamond Bar's special events coordinator, Andee Tarazon. "The real eggs are more traditional, but they're just colored, and how many hard boiled eggs can you possibly eat? The kids are a lot happier with the toys and candy. It's very cute."





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Friends of the Library plan wine soiree for literacy on April 15


By Suzanne Sproul, Staff Writer - Inland Valley Daily Bulletin


Article Launched:04/08/2007 12:00:00 AM PDT


Baskets are wrapped. Wines are chilling. And food preparation has begun for the upcoming Diamond Bar Friends of the Library's wine soiree.


For the past 14 years, this major fundraiser has brought the community together in support of literacy. The 2007 version is set from 4 to 7 p.m. Sunday, April 15, at the Diamond Bar Center. Tickets are available for $50 per person, or $60 at the door. It's one of the parties of the year with proceeds going right back to the library.


"This is our major fundraiser of the year. The money we raise will be used to improve the library, specifically to replace the large 17-foot circulation desk with a smaller version, which will then add more room for our children's area. We also want to add two self-checkout machines and we want to start a new program for emergent readers through 4 years old," said Dianne Forbing, president of the Diamond Bar Friends of the Library.


The present library is used extensively and space is an issue, but reconfiguring some areas will go a long way toward making the facility more people-friendly.


"We want to create space for children, which in turn creates educational environments to play and read," Forbing said. "We want the library to be a living place not just a place to store books."


Kathleen Newe started this fundraiser years ago, and it has kept improving and expanding ever since. "The reason this idea came to me was the community was told that the county was going to cut back on the library's hours of operation down to twice a week. That just wasn't right, so some concerned citizens got together and was trying to come up with anything that might be able to save money. I heard about this type of idea and said we could do it in my backyard if we had to," Newe said.


She didn't have to. Instead, she went to a council meeting and protested the move.


"I said if the cable company shut down to twice a week the chamber would be filled with people upset about it. Some people at the Shilo Inn restaurant heard what I said and they offered to provide the food and the space. It's been going ever since," she said.


Restaurants will spotlight their menu fare, providing guests with tastes of all kinds of delicious dishes.


Participants are The Coffee Klatch, The Whole Enchilada, Jolly Bagel Deli and Restaurant, Mandarin Taste, Kyala Sushi and Japanese Cuisine, Kentucky Fried Chicken, D'Antonio's Ristorante, Aljibani Halal Market, Carbon Grill, Champs Elysee Bakery, Cold Stone Creamery, Dream Dinners of Diamond Bar, Shilo Inn Suites Hotel Catering, Mimi's Caf , Holiday Inn Select Catering, Diamong Bar Golf Course and Graber Olive House.


Eileen Tillery, longtime community supporter for various groups, has also arranged for the New World International Wine Judging Competition to donate wines.


"Libraries don't get the attention they deserve, so everyone with the Friends is thrilled that so many people care enough to come out. You'll have a great time and it's a great way to connect with friends again or to make new ones," Newe said.


The three co-chairs of the event are Nancy Lyons, Rick Rogers and Tony Torng.


"This event is so much fun. Everyone who goes has the opportunity to taste good food from very good restaurants and help the library, too," Lyons said. "You'll leave with the satisfaction of knowing you've done something good for your community."


For information and tickets, call (909) 861-2002.




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Suburban homes going to pot


from: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20070407-9999-1n7pothouse.html


Savvy marijuana growers are moving their operations indoors


By Matt Krasnowski - COPLEY NEWS SERVICE April 7, 2007


DIAMOND BAR - After a new neighbor moved in across the street from Betty Phillips, the block took on a distinctive odor.


"It was awful," she said. "I thought we had skunks."


Last week, Phillips learned the smell was coming from a different suburban nuisance - one that is increasingly finding its way into upscale enclaves around California and the rest of the nation.


Inside her new neighbor's $580,000, three-bedroom home, police found 1,886 marijuana plants with an estimated street value of up to $10 million.


A week earlier and a few miles across town, investigators discovered about 2,100 plants worth up to $12 million in a 3,000-square-foot, two-story home, which in January had sold for more than $800,000.


On Wednesday, two more pot-growing homes were found in Rowland Heights, a bedroom community a few miles west of Diamond Bar. The homes had a combined 1,800 plants worth up to $10 million, an investigator said.


Officials in San Diego also announced this week that they had shut down a novel growing operation in Santa Ysabel - 454 plants in a series of underground rooms accessible by elevator.


Although the indoor marijuana farms in Diamond Bar weren't quite that creative, the discoveries shocked residents of this clean, quiet, suburban city of 58,000 people nestled in the hills about 25 miles east of Los Angeles.


But law enforcement officials say the locals have simply discovered what many suburban families across North America have learned: Large-scale pot growers want to be their neighbors.


The trend should concern suburbanites, even if they believe marijuana isn't a hard-core drug, officials said. Wherever millions of dollars' worth of pot plants go, criminals and violence often follow.


Having such a criminal enterprise in a neighborhood setting is "fraught with potential danger," said Dan Simmons, an agent in the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's San Diego office.


"In the past several years, there has been a proliferation of indoor growers," he added. "If I could attribute that to anything, it would be the perceived ease with which you can grow marijuana in your own home."


The DEA said more than 400,000 plants were seized from so-called "grow houses" nationwide last year, a steep increase from the 270,000 plants discovered in 2005.


San Diego County has had several in addition to the one in Santa Ysabel.


DEA and Internal Revenue Service agents found more than 1,000 plants last year in two Oceanside homes owned by Bardia Rahimzadeh, who pleaded guilty to charges in connection with that case.


Brothers Christopher and Eric DeMatteis also pleaded guilty last year to charges in connection with 555 plants discovered in a house Eric owned in a gated Oceanside community.


In Florida, Georgia, New Hampshire and Washington state, law enforcement officials have found well-to-do residences that essentially have been gutted, rewired and turned into greenhouses with the purpose of using every square foot for marijuana production.


In the past nine months in California, law enforcement agencies have found 50 grow houses, most in new housing developments ranging from the Sacramento area to the Central Valley. Roughly 24,000 plants worth an estimated $90 million were seized and 16 people were arrested, said Gordon Taylor, a DEA agent based in Sacramento.


Law enforcement officials said they believe those houses are connected to a Vietnamese organized-crime outfit from the San Francisco area.


"Why are they picking these neighborhoods? One theory is that in these newer developments, there is a relative anonymity. People don't really know their neighbors and (they are) less likely to have suspicions raised if someone is not there that often," Taylor said.


Almost all the Northern California homes were purchased using 100 percent financing, Taylor said. The homes were so heavily financed that there was nothing for the owners to forfeit to the government.


The trend appears to have originated in the Canadian province of British Columbia, Taylor said, where Asian crime groups are suspected of having thousands of growing operations. Their product, known as "B.C. Bud," is highly potent and can cost up to $5,000 a pound.


American growers apparently "have stolen a page from the B.C. Bud handbook," turning up first in Washington and now California, Taylor said.


Although some neighbors of the Diamond Bar homes said they were worried about possible retribution from associates of the arrested growers, others said the pot operations caused little concern.


"It's not like it's a crack house," said Bill Maher, a seven-year Diamond Bar resident who lives across the street from the house raided on March 21.


Neighbors of these homes have good reason to be concerned. Some homes with indoor pot-growing operations have suffered damage from fires, possibly because of substandard rewiring. In Oceanside earlier this year, firefighters arrived at a burning home and discovered hundreds of marijuana plants in a converted garage.


The DEA's Taylor pointed out that while many people don't consider marijuana to be a hard drug, it's serious business to the people who cultivate and distribute it.


"When you have organized-crime groups where millions of dollars are at stake, it would not be unusual for there to be violence involved at some point," he said.






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Thursday, April 5, 2007

Pot Busts in Months Net Huge Supply


http://www.sgvtribune.com/news/ci_5586807

By Mark Petix Staff Writer - April 5, 2007


POMONA - One month, five major busts and tons of marijuana worth more than $36million.


The amount of marijuana seized by law enforcement in Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties since March 7 is impressive.


But will the busts that began with the discovery of three tons of marijuana inside an abandoned truck in Ontario make a difference on the streets?


"Oh, it's a significant amount," said Art Marinello, task force commander for the San Bernardino County West End Narcotic Team. "But to put a number on it, or to say we're talking 50 percent or 10percent \ would be completely a guess on my part."


The recent discovery of sophisticated indoor grow houses in Diamond Bar and Chino Hills underscores just how far people are willing to go to meet the demand for high-end pot.


When L.A. County sheriff's deputies served warrants on homes in Diamond Bar and Chino Hills last week, they found about $12 million in high-grade marijuana and the sophisticated equipment needed to grow it.


Marinello says growers tapped into the power to bypass the electric meter and tapped natural gas lines to fuel generators feeding the plants CO2.


Timers controlled everything from water and nutrients to the grow lights.


"The light actually moves across the room like the sun," he said. "I tell you, these guys are into production."


Indoor growing allows marijuana cultivation year-round, says Manuel Ariza, deputy director of L.A. IMPACT, an inter-agency task force.


"The organizations have become very sophisticated," he said. "This is not a guy with two plants growing in the back yard."


Marinello said when he began working in law enforcement 28 years ago, $10 could buy a sandwich bag full of pot. Today, a pound of low-grade pot sells for between $300 and $340. He said a pound of high-grade pot goes for $2,500 to $6,000.


This is not your 1970s marijuana.


Ariza said pot once had THC levels of between 2 and 4 percent. THC is the chemical ingredient that gives marijuana its kick. Today's marijuana has THC levels as high as 20 percent.


The string of pot busts, including the discovery of 155 pounds of marijuana at a house in Pomona on Saturday, were a combination of luck and good information. "Obviously we talk to each other," Marinello said, "but this was not a coordinated event at all."




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Why is Diamond Bar Listed as a Sanctuary City?


This news came to me via Blogger OMC5padraig at http://omc5padraig.blogspot.com/index.html



Despite a federal law that requires local governments to cooperate with Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Agency, many large urban cities (and some small) have adopted so-called "sanctuary policies." Generally, sanctuary policies instruct city employees not to notify the federal government of the presence of illegal aliens living in their communities. The policies also end the distinction between legal and illegal immigration -- so illegal aliens often benefit from city services too.

The justification of creating sanctuary cities is often under the guise of protecting "immigrant rights." But illegal aliens are not immigrants -- immigrants come to the US legally, and maintain their legal presence. When a person is illegally smuggled into the US or knowingly violates their visa restrictions -- he/she is not an immigrant or visitor, but an illegal alien subject to deportation. The real reason behind sanctuary policies are public officials bowing to political pressure from the open-border lobby -- and/or an attempt to pander for votes at election time...


Included cities here in California are...


Bell Gardens, CA
City of Industry, CA
City of Commerce, CA
Cypress, CA
Davis CA
Diamond Bar, CA ???
Downey, CA
Lakewood, CA
Los Angeles, CA
Long Beach, CA
Maywood, CA
Paramount, CA
Pico Rivera, CA
Sonoma County, CA
So. Gate, CA
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
Vernon, CA
Wilmington, CA


Isn't it time we talk to our city officials about this?




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Diamond Bar High School Honor Society News


Agenda 4/03/07


By DBHS Honor Society(DBHS Honor Society)
What: Diamond Bar City Birthday Party When: Sunday, April 22nd from 11am to 5pm (different shifts available) Where: Pantera Park 738 Pantera Drive Diamond Bar, CA Points: one pt per hour - please attach your original halfsheet to ...


DBHS Honor Society - http://dbhshs.blogspot.com/index.html




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Ten million dollars, $4 million, $2 million.




Growing the green - Marijuana farms moving indoors


By Jannise Johnson, Staff Writer


Launched April 1, 2007

Growing marijuana is a business in which having a green thumb can mean a lot of green down the line.


Marijuana growers are increasingly moving their operations indoors in an effort to extend the growing season and make more money, authorities say.


Although growing marijuana indoors used to present less of a risk compared with cultivating the illegal plant outside, that hasn't been the case locally in the past few weeks.


The indoor grow houses have seemed to magically appear all over the western half of the Inland Valley.


On Saturday, 155 pounds of marijuana was found at a house in the 1600 block of El Camino in Pomona. Police are looking for a suspect.


This followed search warrants served Wednesday at two houses in upper-middle-class neighborhoods in Diamond Bar and Chino Hills.


Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies found about $10 million worth of high-grade marijuana plants inside a house in the 500 block of Crooked Arrow Drive in Diamond Bar. Tommy Wong, 27, was being held at the sheriff's Walnut station on suspicion of cultivation of marijuana.


San Bernardino County deputies found plants and growing materials worth about $2 million earlier that day at a house in the 15400 block of Country Club Drive in Chino Hills, said Art Marinello, commander of the sheriff's drug task force.


William Hardaway, 46, of Huntington Beach, and Pedro Bengochea, 50, of Chino Hills, were arrested in connection with the operations at the house. They were booked into West Valley Detention Center in Rancho Cucamonga. Hardaway was booked on suspicion of sales of marijuana and Bengochea on suspicion of cultivation and possession for sale.


On March 21, Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies served a search warrant at a 3,000- square-foot house in the 1500 block of Eldertree Drive in Diamond Bar. No one was living there, but it had been converted to a marijuana grow house. About 2,000 marijuana plants were confiscated. Kiet Chung, 40, was found inside the house and was booked on suspicion of cultivation of marijuana, officials said.


On March 14, authorities were alerted to a house in the 6000 block of Park Crest Drive in Chino Hills for a fire. The blaze erupted in an electrical panel outside the house.


San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies found 1,300 marijuana plants inside the house and estimated they had a value of more than $4 million. The plants all stood 18 to 20 inches tall and were fully grown, sheriff's spokeswoman Jodi Miller said. There was no evidence of anybody living at the house.


In all of the cases of indoor farms, the marijuana was grown using hydroponics techniques that use indoor lights and nutrient-filled liquids instead of outdoor sun and soil.


Recent publicity may have made the grow houses easier to spot, and that's fine with Los Angeles County sheriff's Lt. Jim Whitten.


"That's why we're catching them," he said about the public's new knowledge of what characteristics make up the grow houses.


Whitten said during the past six months he has noticed an increase in discoveries of these indoor farms.


During that time period, Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies have also discovered indoor operations in the Santa Clarita and Antelope Valley areas.


Indoor growing is nothing new, but it has evolved, Whitten said. In the past, indoor growers typically limited themselves to a closet or one or two rooms. Authorities didn't often come across whole houses dedicated to the process.


The marijuana-growing trend was different five to 10 years ago as well, Whitten said. Back then, growers would rent out industrial business spaces of about 1,000 feet to produce marijuana. That became risky due to landlords and security guards, Whitten said.


Whitten and Marinello said they have no evidence that the recent grow operations found in the Inland Valley are connected.


"As far as we know, there is no connection between our (busts) and any others," Marinello said.


In January, the Drug Enforcement Administration was called in under similar circumstances in San Joaquin County in Northern California where several indoor operations were discovered.


Marinello said he does not foresee that happening soon. But it would be up to local prosecutors to decide if they want to bring in federal authorities, he said.


Whitten said he doesn't doubt growers will begin to alter their pattern as the public becomes more aware of the signs of indoor marijuana farms.




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Signs to Watch: Indoor marijuana farms


Signs to watch for if you suspect a house in your neighborhood might be an indoor marijuana farm, according to Los Angeles County sheriff's Lt. Jim Whitten.


Windows are always shut.
Unkempt yards.
Lack of activity inside and outside.
Mail or newspapers pile up outside.
New owners immediately begin heavy construction inside.
Owners move in several items, but there is a noticeable absence of clothing or furniture.
A three- or four-bedroom house has only one or two people seen there during the week.
The presence of a strong smell similar to skunk odor.


If you live in Diamond Bar and see this... call the Walnut Sheriff's Station.





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Marijuana Farms Find Home in Suburbs


Original Article at: http://www.contracostatimes.com/search/ci_5590528


Marijuana farms find home in suburbs
Growers invest in expensive houses to conceal their operations


By Tony Barboza and David Pierson - LOS ANGELES TIMES - Contra Costa Times Article Launched:04/04/2007 03:06:58 AM PDT



DIAMOND BAR -- Mayor Steve Tye never noticed anything unusual about the upscale three-bedroom suburban home a block from his house.


That is, until March 28, when Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies burst in and found the entire house had been converted into a massive indoor marijuana farm, complete with flood-table irrigation system and overhead lights on timers that were hooked up illegally to bypass meter readings.


It's the second time in just more than a week a suburban house turned pot farm has been discovered in Diamond Bar, a bedroom community of 58,000 in the eastern San Gabriel Valley. Two more marijuana-cultivating homes were found in a neighboring suburb this month.


Detectives are investigating whether the houses might be tied to a similar suburban pot ring busted last year in Northern California and allegedly run by a Chinese gang.


In Diamond Bar alone, authorities have hauled away what authorities estimate to be more than $22 million in marijuana.


Tye said he was stunned when sheriff's deputies told him an estimated $10 million in marijuana was being grown near his house. He suspects the growers were counting on Diamond Bar's low profile to conceal their operation.


"It's a disturbing trend. I think people that break the law are always looking for an opportunity to stay hidden from the authorities," he said. "They've used up growing it in mountains, the outlying areas, and now their next greatest idea is doing it in neighborhoods."


Authorities in neighboring upscale Chino Hills have found about $6 million in marijuana plants in recent weeks, including one house discovered March 28.


Two weeks ago, police seized 1,300 plants from a six-bedroom house in Chino Hills, said Jodi Miller, spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.


Officials are not sure whether the cases are connected, but there some striking similarities. Both houses in Diamond Bar recently had been purchased, apparently with the intent to use suburbia as a cover for major marijuana cultivation.


That's a substantial investment in an area where most houses sell for $600,000 to $1 million, authorities said.


In the first Diamond Bar house, deputies found a special ventilation system designed to prevent the smell of marijuana from reaching the street.


The lack of such a system in the house uncovered Thursday in Diamond Bar, and the smell that wafted out to the street as a result, is what tipped neighbors off, said Lt. Jim Whitten of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Narcotics Bureau.


"Every room had marijuana growing in it except the bathroom and kitchen," he said. "There's no evidence of anybody living here. It was just all set up for growing."


Last year, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and local police discovered similar elaborate marijuana farmers hidden inside nearly 40 suburbs homes across Northern California.


As in the Southern California cases, the suspects allegedly purchased the homes for $500,000 or more and meticulously converted them into cultivation centers. They knocked down walls, created irrigation systems and even hired gardeners to cut the lawns and take out the trash to avoid raising suspicion, authorities said.


DEA officials say the Northern California marijuana ring was operated by a Chinese-American crime operation based in San Francisco's Chinatown.





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