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Brooklyn cherry factory-marijuana mystery deepens after visit by investigators prompt

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
Another news article said he was apparently working with the mob and his suicide was out of fear they would kill him anyway

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york...marijuana-mystery-continues-article-1.2128672


investigators scoured a Brooklyn maraschino cherry factory and grilled its workers Wednesday after the owner's suicide exposed the business as cover for a huge marijuana operation. Probers armed with search warrants were back at Dell's Maraschino Cherries, gathering evidence one day after third-generation owner Arthur Mondella fatally shot himself inside a factory bathroom.


"The investigators are questioning everybody," said a close friend of the late businessman. "Not only about what happened with the suicide, but also about the drugs."


The Mondella pal said he didn't believe any of the dead man's relatives were aware of the illegal pot-growing operation sprouting beneath the cherry factory.


But he said Mondella was known to spend up to 20 hours a day working at the factory, including shifts on Christmas Day and other holidays — a devotion perhaps explained by his second business.


fter Mondella shot himself in the head, authorities discovered a huge marijuana growing operation in the basement of the Red Hook factory — a scenario straight out of "Breaking Bad."
Law enforcement sources wondered if there was more to Mondella’s bizarre story than manufacturing cherries upstairs and growing marijuana downstairs.


“You don’t kill youself over weed,” one source told the Daily News. “There has to be more than that.”


His adult daughter Dominique, through a cousin, declined to speak about the ongoing investigation.


“We’re not interested,” the cousin said. “I’m sorry. She doesn’t want to talk to anyone right now.”


Mondella, a twice-married father of three, showed no outward signs of leading a double life. Just last year, his business underwent a $5 million renovation."Absolutely would have never suspected anything," said the owner of a nearby business. "Everybody loved him in the neighborhood. He was a good guy. I really have nothing but nice things to say about the man."


A police source indicated investigators were just as perplexed by the discovery of the drug den in what started as a raid for environmental violations — dumping syrup and other waste into the water.


"It's very odd ... Strange," said the source. "You can work your entire career in Red Hook and never really know what's going on in one of these big buildings. You can have an illegal operation going on right under your nose."


Investigators also recovered about 80 pounds of pot stuffed inside three bags, along with hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash kept in safes at the business.


Mondella, 57, initially cooperated with the 25 investigators who flooded his factory about 8 a.m. Tuesday.


But his mood turned once a detective became suspicious about a flimsy-looking section of shelving held in place by magnets — and other investigators caught a faint whiff of weed.



When asked about the shelves, Mondella excused himself, locked the door to his private bathroom and took his own life.
"Take care of my kids!" he screamed at his sister Joanne Capece before pulling the trigger.


The Mondella family, which opened the business in 1939, was looking to get the operation up and running again, according to Mondella's friend.


Truckers arriving for pickups and deliveries Wednesday morning were simply turned away as investigators scoured the building and questioned employees.


Ranjit Gill, a trucker who made a 14-hour, 750-mile trip from Indiana, was shocked to arrive and hear the sordid tale about Mondella.


"This is a surprise to me that something like that would happen here," he sai
 

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
http://www.cleveland.com/nation/index.ssf/2015/02/cherry_factory_hides_marijuana.html

nvestigators in New York are looking for answers after a large marijuana-growing operation was discovered in a maraschino cherry factory in Brooklyn, leading its longtime owner to commit suicide while locked in a bathroom at the facility.

Arthur Mondella, 57, whose family had operated Dell's Maraschino Cherries since 1948, reportedly yelled "Take care of my kids!" to his sister after locking himself in a bathroom before taking his own life, reports the New York Daily News. He shot himself just as investigators discovered the pot-growing operation in the factory.

The incident has brought cherry production to a halt at the facility and investigators are now checking whether Mondella had connections to organized crime, according to the New York Post.

"That's why he shot himself. He knew the mob would kill him," a law enforcement source tells the Post. "Why else would you shoot yourself over 100 pounds of weed? It was the multimillion operation he lost."

According to the New York Times, Dell's was one of the largest producers of maraschino cherries in the country. It was housed in a brick building with no markings on the outside.

But the Times reports there were things that made the building unusual: Mondella had a fleet of vehicles in a garage, including a Porsche, Rolls-Royce, a Harley-Davidson and a Mercedes. There were security cameras on the building's corners and razor wire barricading the roof.

An investigator tells the Times it appears the cherry plant's employees were unaware of the marijuana-growing operations. Officials arrived at about 8 a.m. Tuesday to investigate alleged pollution in the waters near the cherry plant, the Daily News reports.

While there for about five hours, investigators found a faint smell of marijuana. A false wall hid the entrance to the area where the pot was grown, the Post reports.

The hidden area contained hundreds of marijuana plants and looked "extremely professional" and very expensive, a source tells the Post. About $200,000 in cash was found in a safe.

Pat Murano, 41, who has lived next door to the factory since 2005, tells the Times that it's difficult to keep a secret in the neighborhood where the factory was located ... "except this one."

He said he found the extensive security measures at the factory curious.

"I didn't think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment," he said.
 

blastfrompast

Active member
Veteran
What kind of time would he be looking at in NY...

Just curious....Life in prison vs a bullet...

What blows my mind is how he could use a cardboard wall to hide the grow...Seriously....
 
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