News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 26, 2006
Contact: Special Agent Casey McEnry
(415) 436-7994 Office
(408) 422-6185 Cellular
Maker
of Marijuana Candy Products Pleads Guilty
and Agrees to 70-Month Prison Term
Four Employees Also Plead Guilty
OAKLAND – United
States Attorney Kevin V. Ryan announced that Kenneth Affolter and four
other individuals pleaded guilty today for their role in a conspiracy
to manufacture and distribute marijuana plants and marijuana products
that mimicked well known candy and soft-drink brands. This guilty plea
is the result of an investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration.
In pleading guilty,
Mr. Affolter, 39, of Lafayette, admitted that he had controlled and
managed several marijuana cultivation facilities in Emeryville and
Oakland. He further admitted that those facilities had been devoted
not only to cultivating and distributing marijuana plants, but also
to creating edible products containing tetrahydrocannabinol (THC),
the active chemical in marijuana. These edible products, which Mr.
Affolter sold under the brand name "Beyond Bomb," were designed
and packaged to resemble parodies of actual candy and food products;
examples included "Munchy Way" candy bars (designed to resemble
Milky Way candy bars made by Mars Incorporated), "Pot Tarts" (designed
to resemble Pop Tarts made by Kellogg), and "Trippy" peanut
butter (designed to resemble Skippy peanut butter made by Unilever
Best Foods). Mr. Affolter admitted that the eleven other co-defendants
in the case were employees he had hired to work at his production and cultivation
facilities, and that he had been responsible for the production and
distribution of more than 1,000 marijuana plants." While real
candy may give you cavities, these individuals know that marijuana
candy can get you jail time," stated DEA Special Agent in Charge
Javier F. Pena.
Four of Mr. Affolter’s
former employees and co-defendants also entered guilty pleas today.
Amy Teresa Arata of Oakland and Jesse Monko of Walnut Creek both admitted
to performing supervisory roles in Mr. Affolter’s marijuana facilities.
They pleaded guilty to felony conspiracy counts and agreed to serve
18-month prison terms. Jaime Alvarez-Lopez and Elizabeth Ramirez, both
citizens of Mexico, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor marijuana offenses
and agreed to serve 12-month prison terms.
Mr. Affolter was
first indicted by a federal grand jury on March 30, 2006, and was charged
with manufacturing and distributing, and conspiring to manufacture
and distribute, marijuana plants, in violation to Title 18 United States
Code Sections 841 and 846. On June 8, 2006, the grand jury added an
additional charge of witness tampering, in violation of Title 18 United
States Code Section 1512. Under the terms of the plea agreement, which
is subject to court approval, Mr. Affolter pleaded guilty to a single
count of conspiring to manufacture and distribute marijuana, and agreed
to serve a 70-month sentence for his crime.
In March 2006,
DEA agents raided Mr. Affolter’s production facilities and his
residence. The raids, which were conducted pursuant to federally authorized
search warrants, resulted in the discovery of a large-scale marijuana
operation involving thousands of marijuana plants, as well as thousands
of marijuana-related soda, candy, and food products. Large sums of
United States currency and several firearms were also recovered from
Mr. Affolter’s residence.
Mr. Affolter and
Mr. Alvarez-Lopez are scheduled to be sentenced before Senior Judge
D. Lowell Jensen in Oakland on December 15, 2006. Ms. Arata, Mr. Monko,
and Ms. Ramirez are scheduled to be sentenced before the same judge
on January 5, 2007.
Dana R. Wagner
is the Assistant U.S. Attorney who is prosecuting the case with the
assistance of Mae Chu and Cynthia Daniel. The prosecution is the result
of an extended DEA investigation led by the DEA Oakland Resident Office. |