Two from pot raid in Olney sentenced
Two men connected with the Black Pearl
medical marijuana growing and dispensary business on U.S. 93 in
Olney have been sentenced in federal court.
According to court documents, Ryan
Blindheim, 35, of Whitefish, purchased an old warehouse in Olney
and, with help from Evan Corum, 35, of Whitefish, transformed it
into a grow operation. Agents found 488 marijuana plants and 70
pounds of bulk marijuana at the site when it was raided on March
14.
Prior to the raid, agents from U.S.
Department of Homeland Security tracked deposits Blindheim and
Corum made in a Whitefish Credit Union savings account. Deposits in
November 2010 alone ranged from $3,000 to $9,000 and totaled
$86,850.
Blindheim said he invested $300,000
purchasing the 18,000-square-foot building and equipping it with
grow equipment. He has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to manufacture
marijuana and money laundering and awaits sentencing.
Corum, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy
to launder money, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Donald
Molloy on Dec. 1 to six months in prison and six months on house
arrest. The $86,850 from the credit union was forfeited.
Michael Kassner, 24, of Kalispell, who
also was arrested in connection with the Black Pearl raid, was
sentenced by Molloy on Nov. 10 to 12 months and one day in prison.
According to court documents, he and Tyler Roe, 29, of Kalispell,
lived on the premises and took care of the plants.
Kassner, who had the electricity bill
in his name, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana.
Roe, who considered himself the “on-site manager,” has pleaded
guilty to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana and awaits
sentencing.