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Gary B. Coulter's 30-year career dealing in marijuana has ended. The 54-year-old resident of eastern Crawford County, charged in one of the biggest marijuana-growing operations in Pennsylvania history, has pleaded guilty to having the key role in that case, all but guaranteeing that he will spend at least 10 years in a federal prison.
The government prosecuted Coulter only for the 1,183 full-grown marijuana plants -- worth an estimated street value of $1.2 million -- that drug agents seized from secret growing spots throughout eastern Crawford County in the summer of 2006. However, according to statements from the government at Coulter's plea hearing on Wednesday, Coulter has trafficked in marijuana for 20 to 30 years, and during that period never filed a federal income tax return.
Coulter "was significantly involved in the distribution of marijuana in the Crawford County area," said the prosecutor, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christian Trabold. Trabold at the plea hearing did not provide a dollar figure for how much money the government believes Coulter and his five co-defendants, including his son, Dustin C. Coulter, made off the marijuana ring that the agents busted in 2006. But Coulter's plea deal requires him to forfeit to the government all the items and property that investigators said he bought with drug-related revenue.
The list of forfeited property is attached to Coulter's plea letter. The inventory goes on for five pages and comprises 99 items.
They include seven Harley-Davidson motorcycles, including two with sidecars; three Harley-Davidson three-wheeled motorcycles; several all-terrain vehicles; a Jeep Wrangler; three Jaguars; two crossbows; 49 firearms, including handguns, rifles and shotguns; two pairs of binoculars; a pair of night-vision goggles; a wireless video system; a set of two-way radios; four scales; two grow lights; and a wind-machine fan.
Coulter, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traffic in marijuana, faces a mandatory 10-year sentence because the number of seized marijuana plants was larger than 1,000, a threshold amount for certain federal sentencing factors to kick in. Coulter's maximum possible sentence is life in prison, but he is likely to get only the 10-year mandatory sentence once the judge accounts for the credit Coulter will receive for pleading guilty. Coulter as part of the plea also agreed to waive his right to appeal his sentence, except under highly limited circumstances.
Senior U.S. District Judge Maurice B. Cohill Jr. accepted the plea and set sentencing for Aug. 5 in federal court in Erie. He asked Coulter why he decided to plead guilty. "I just want to get this over with and behind me," Coulter said. Coulter attended the sentencing in a wheelchair. He had a leg amputated after a motorcycle accident in 2005.
Coulter answered Cohill's questions quietly, and he said he has been diagnosed as being "opiate-dependent." He said he had no problem with the summary of the case that Trabold read to Cohill. "That's fair," Coulter said.
Authorities described Coulter's marijuana growing operation as one of the largest in Pennsylvania history when agents found the plants in August 2006. Drug agents with the state Attorney General's Office initiated the probe, which they started by having a confidential informant buy marijuana at Coulter's house in the 17000 block of Halfast Road in Rome Township.
The agents got a search warrant and raided the house. The critical piece of seized evidence was a written "cultivation record for the group's marijuana," Trabold said in court. He said Coulter told the agents his live-in girlfriend, Lisa Parker, kept the log, which was written in code. Parker "produced a detailed confession about the code book," Trabold said, and agents used the information to find the marijuana plants growing throughout eastern Crawford County.
A federal grand jury in Erie indicted Coulter, Parker and their four co-defendants on marijuana charges on June 12. All but Parker, who is awaiting trial, have pleaded guilty or have pleaded guilty and been sentenced.
What's next? Gary B. Coulter, the central figure in a huge marijuana-growing case in Crawford County, faces a mandatory sentence of 10 years in a federal prison at his Aug. 5 sentence in federal court in Erie. He pleaded guilty Wednesday.
Five other defendants were also charged in the case.
Source: The Erie Times-News
Copright: 2008, The Erie Times-News
Contact: ED PALATTELLA, ed.palattella@timesnews.com [more details]
Website: GoErie.com: Marijuana ring leader pleads guilty
The government prosecuted Coulter only for the 1,183 full-grown marijuana plants -- worth an estimated street value of $1.2 million -- that drug agents seized from secret growing spots throughout eastern Crawford County in the summer of 2006. However, according to statements from the government at Coulter's plea hearing on Wednesday, Coulter has trafficked in marijuana for 20 to 30 years, and during that period never filed a federal income tax return.
Coulter "was significantly involved in the distribution of marijuana in the Crawford County area," said the prosecutor, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christian Trabold. Trabold at the plea hearing did not provide a dollar figure for how much money the government believes Coulter and his five co-defendants, including his son, Dustin C. Coulter, made off the marijuana ring that the agents busted in 2006. But Coulter's plea deal requires him to forfeit to the government all the items and property that investigators said he bought with drug-related revenue.
The list of forfeited property is attached to Coulter's plea letter. The inventory goes on for five pages and comprises 99 items.
They include seven Harley-Davidson motorcycles, including two with sidecars; three Harley-Davidson three-wheeled motorcycles; several all-terrain vehicles; a Jeep Wrangler; three Jaguars; two crossbows; 49 firearms, including handguns, rifles and shotguns; two pairs of binoculars; a pair of night-vision goggles; a wireless video system; a set of two-way radios; four scales; two grow lights; and a wind-machine fan.
Coulter, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traffic in marijuana, faces a mandatory 10-year sentence because the number of seized marijuana plants was larger than 1,000, a threshold amount for certain federal sentencing factors to kick in. Coulter's maximum possible sentence is life in prison, but he is likely to get only the 10-year mandatory sentence once the judge accounts for the credit Coulter will receive for pleading guilty. Coulter as part of the plea also agreed to waive his right to appeal his sentence, except under highly limited circumstances.
Senior U.S. District Judge Maurice B. Cohill Jr. accepted the plea and set sentencing for Aug. 5 in federal court in Erie. He asked Coulter why he decided to plead guilty. "I just want to get this over with and behind me," Coulter said. Coulter attended the sentencing in a wheelchair. He had a leg amputated after a motorcycle accident in 2005.
Coulter answered Cohill's questions quietly, and he said he has been diagnosed as being "opiate-dependent." He said he had no problem with the summary of the case that Trabold read to Cohill. "That's fair," Coulter said.
Authorities described Coulter's marijuana growing operation as one of the largest in Pennsylvania history when agents found the plants in August 2006. Drug agents with the state Attorney General's Office initiated the probe, which they started by having a confidential informant buy marijuana at Coulter's house in the 17000 block of Halfast Road in Rome Township.
The agents got a search warrant and raided the house. The critical piece of seized evidence was a written "cultivation record for the group's marijuana," Trabold said in court. He said Coulter told the agents his live-in girlfriend, Lisa Parker, kept the log, which was written in code. Parker "produced a detailed confession about the code book," Trabold said, and agents used the information to find the marijuana plants growing throughout eastern Crawford County.
A federal grand jury in Erie indicted Coulter, Parker and their four co-defendants on marijuana charges on June 12. All but Parker, who is awaiting trial, have pleaded guilty or have pleaded guilty and been sentenced.
What's next? Gary B. Coulter, the central figure in a huge marijuana-growing case in Crawford County, faces a mandatory sentence of 10 years in a federal prison at his Aug. 5 sentence in federal court in Erie. He pleaded guilty Wednesday.
Five other defendants were also charged in the case.
- Coulter's live-in girlfriend, Lisa Parker, is awaiting trial.
- Coulter's son, Dustin C. Coulter, was sentenced Monday to a year and six months in federal prison.
- Parker's son, Nathan Parker, pleaded guilty and will be sentenced Aug. 5.
- Randy Popieski was sentenced Monday to a day in federal custody and four years of probation.
- James Keyes pleaded guilty and will be sentenced Aug. 4.
Source: The Erie Times-News
Copright: 2008, The Erie Times-News
Contact: ED PALATTELLA, ed.palattella@timesnews.com [more details]
Website: GoErie.com: Marijuana ring leader pleads guilty