Kinraid told Probation, however, his arrest had been the catalyst he needed to address his addiction to cannabis.
"I'm kind of glad it happened," he said. "I needed something to make me stop."
Kinraid's job involved him working for a property business – owned by his father - which provided rental accommodation for the numerous tertiary students in Dunedin.
There were 353 plants seized made up of 13 different strains, which had been cloned from mother plants.
If sold at $450 an ounce, the crop in the flat could have scored the men $476,550.
A police summary of facts detailed the extreme lengths the men went to to ensure the cultivation was successful and the array of sophisticated equipment that they used.
There were grow tents in all four bedrooms, each of which had a ventilation system with the air passing through a carbon filter.
The roof space was also used and a water reservoir had been installed up there.