Colorado man gets two-year prison term for role in hash oil explosion
Published: Oct 3, 2017, 12:45 pm • Updated: Oct 3, 2017, 1:21 pm
By Amelia Arvesen, Longmont Times-Call
A Colorado man charged in connection with a hash oil explosion that burned a shed in Longmont last year was sentenced to two years in prison Friday, according to court records.
Andrew Allen Ziegenfelder (Boulder County Sheriff’s Office)
Andrew Allen Ziegenfelder, 30, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit extraction of marijuana concentrate, a Class 3 drug felony, during an arraignment hearing at the Boulder County Justice Center.
Prosecutors dismissed the other original charges of extraction of marijuana concentrate, processing or manufacturing marijuana or marijuana concentrate, possession with intent to manufacture or distribute marijuana or marijuana concentrate, and fourth-degree arson as part of the plea deal, court records show.
Related stories
- Man blows up underground bunker while making hash oil, burning self and two others, sheriff says
- Unfixed home wrecked by hash oil manufacturing raises Q’s about oversight
- Colorado Supreme Court: Man who caused explosion while making hash oil not covered by legalization
Ziegenfelder’s co-defendant, Paul Garrett, was sentenced in June to two years of probation and 100 hours of community service.
According to an arrest warrant affidavit, the investigation into the house at 1035 Baker St. in Longmont began after neighbors reported a fire the evening of Oct. 8.
To read more of this story go to timescall.com
This story was first published on TimesCall.com
Topics: Colorado, explosion, hash oil, hash oil extraction explosion, longmont