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1,200 pounds of marijuana seized

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Law officers seized more than 1,200 pounds of marijuana at the home of a Frankfort man Monday night - culminating an undercover operation that began in Mexico.

Randy D. Kendall, 49, was arrested without incident at his home at 6505 Flat Creek Road and charged with drug trafficking after officers followed the shipment, valued at nearly $2 million, on its lengthy journey.

Kentucky State Police spokesman Trooper Ronald Turley said KSP, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Drug Enforcement Agency launched an investigation in late January and discovered that a large quantity of marijuana would be shipped to Lawrenceburg from Mexico.

The drugs arrived in Charleston Port, S.C., on a ship, where undercover ICE agents helped load the cargo onto a tractor-trailer and accompanied it on a controlled delivery to the suspect's business, Kendell's Quick Lube, 1505 Daniel Drive, in Lawrenceburg last Friday, Turley said.

KSP officers then joined the ICE agents and monitored activity around Kendall's shop.

"We spent Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday doing surveillance so we could make an arrest," Turley said during a Tuesday press conference at the KSP forensic lab on Sower Boulevard.

"It was a great job by investigators to pull this off without anyone getting hurt."

On Monday afternoon, suspects loaded the marijuana, which was sealed inside 320 separate bags of barium sulfate "a powdery chemical used to make plastic" onto a flatbed truck and delivered it to Kendall's Frankfort home.

Officers made the arrest later that night after watching Kendall and an accomplice, who police declined to name, transfer the drugs from the truck to a nearby barn.

Turley said authorities are not yet aware of what plans were in store for the drugs after their arrival at Kendall's home, though the investigation is ongoing.

"We do know this is 1,200 pounds of marijuana that will not reach the streets of Kentucky," he said.
More arrests related to the case are pending, and KSP is now working with the U.S Attorney General's office to determine if additional charges will be filed against Kendall.

Kendall is being housed in the Franklin County Regional Jail on a $10,000 full cash bond, which had not been posted Wednesday morning.

His preliminary hearing in Circuit Court will be Tuesday.




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Previous 10 Comments   Next 10 Comments of 24 Total Comments
14.
    Posted by perkins March 5, 2008
A quarter: Was 60, now 80. Law of supply and demand. That's just how the free market works.

13.
    Posted by RUKIDDINGME? March 5, 2008


1. Alcoholics don't make good citizens and alcohol is exceedingly more toxic than marijuana, but it is legal.

2. Legalizing alcohol consumption has not made it "safe".

3. If you want to see really toxic legal drugs, read the package insert from any over-the-counter or prescription medication you have on hand.


12.
    Posted by perplexed March 5, 2008
Lets legalize everything, then the last one standing wins.

11.
    Posted by perkins March 5, 2008
Alcohol is toxic. Let's ban it.
Tobacco is toxic. Let's ban it.
Exactly where does liberty begin, and end?

10.
    Posted by txj March 5, 2008
But it is illegal, and for a good reason - it is toxic. Stoners don't make good: students, parents, teachers, employees, or citizens. There is no upside - just a waste of human potential that goes up in smoke.

9.
    Posted by sojourner March 5, 2008
If there was a scavenger hunt and one of the items was marijuana, we all could find it, some of us could maybe find it quicker than others, but we could all find it. The point is, its illegality is not preventing its availability. Why create a black market that brings with it, the inherrent dangers of a black market. Make it safe, make it legal.

8.
    Posted by realdeal March 5, 2008
yes i think more people would. i, personally wouldn't, but thats just me.

7.
    Posted by slinkycat36 March 5, 2008
No

6.
    Posted by kentuckycat1 March 5, 2008
NO

5.
    Posted by ema March 5, 2008
Would more people smoke marijuana if it was legalized? I'd be interested to hear some opinions on this.

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