Commissioner Adam H. Putnam

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Bronson Announces Arrests For Citrus Quarantine Violations


For Information, Contact:

Major Bob Johnson
(850) 245-1300
Bob.Johnson@freshfromflorida.com

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November 20, 2009

TALLAHASSEE – Florida Agriculture and Consumer Services Commissioner Charles H. Bronson announced today the arrest of a Lake County man and woman for allegedly violating state statutes involving the movement of citrus products from a quarantined location.

Charged with knowingly trying to sell infected plants and improper use of a nursery tag were Gary A. Mahon, 31, and his mother, Shelby A. Mahon, 61. The family owns John’s Citrus Trees nursery in Clermont.

The arrests follow an incident in early October, when a rental truck containing citrus trees in which Gary Mahon was traveling was inspected and detained at the Florida Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Interdiction Station in Suwannee County. Investigators determined that the nursery permit number had been falsified and suspected that the trees had come from an unregistered nursery.

Inspectors from the department’s Division of Plant Industry (DPI) were called to the scene and conducted an inspection of the citrus plants contained within the rental truck and determined that some of the trees were infected with citrus canker. The truck was sealed, and the driver was ordered to return the trees to the nursery from which they came.

An ensuing investigation by Bronson’s Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement and DPI determined that the more than 500 trees that were intercepted by authorities allegedly came from the family’s Clermont nursery, which is currently under quarantine due to a citrus canker outbreak.

Following the arrests, the suspects were booked into the Lake County Jail on $2,000 bond.

The Division of Plant Industry works to detect, intercept and control plant pests and diseases that threaten Florida’s native and commercially grown plants and agricultural resources. The citrus industry is vital to the state’s economy. The Division continues to work with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the industry to control the spread of canker and other citrus diseases.

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