Published by Robert L Senior Reporter on Wednesday 19th February 2025, at 21:45hrs

This was a sophisticated cannabis set up in a building on the outskirts of the city centre
A huge £800,000 cannabis factory has been dismantled in Doncaster after officers spotted a hole in the roof of a building just outside the city centre.
In the early hours of Monday morning (17 February), while responding to a separate incident involving a reported break-in, officers made further enquiries into a building in South Parade which had a noticeable hole in its roof.
This led to the discovery of a sophisticated cannabis set up with around 900 plants being grown on different floors of the property.
The plants were worth an estimated total street value of around £800,000.
A car, which was seen fleeing from the scene of the break-in at an excessive speed, was stopped that same morning by Nottinghamshire Police, with three people arrested on suspicion of aggravated burglary. They have since been bailed pending further enquiries.
Sergeant Martin Maw, of Doncaster Central Neighbourhood Policing Team, said: “This was a sophisticated and significant cannabis factory hidden inside a building on the outskirts of Doncaster city centre.
“The electricity had been bypassed both inside and outside the property, posing a significant fire risk.
The electricity in the property had been bypassed posing a serious fire risk
“Urgent repair works have had to be carried out on the roadside and exterior of the property, and the address has since been made safe following intervention by our officers.
“Cannabis factories like this one go far beyond the simple street deal and are more often than not linked to organised crime groups who are responsible for spreading violence, fear and terror in our local communities.
“We will continue dismantling these cannabis factories to make our streets and neighbourhoods safer and I would urge anyone with concerns about drug dealing, supplying or cannabis cultivations in their area to please contact us so we can investigate.”
The property was locked down to allow for the cannabis plants to be seized and the factory dismantled.