Two prep school graduates sought to use their connections and business acumen to establish a monopoly on drug sales to high school students in the affluent Philadelphia suburbs, authorities said Monday.

Neil Scott, 25, and Timothy Brooks, 18, recruited and supplied dealers with marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy and hash oil to sell to teens at five high schools in the tony bedroom communities known as the Main Line, authorities said.

Stacks of cash and semi-automatic weapons are displayed on a table with suspected drugs and dealing equipment during a news conference on Monday, April 21, 2014 in, Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/Kathy Matheson)
Stacks of cash and semi-automatic weapons are displayed on a table with suspected drugs and dealing equipment during a news conference on Monday, April 21, 2014 in, Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/Kathy Matheson)
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A four-month investigation revealed the pair also hired students at Haverford College, Gettysburg College and Lafayette College to peddle drugs at those Pennsylvania schools, authorities said.

Scott and Brooks are graduates of The Haverford School, a $35,000-a-year institution where both played lacrosse. They tapped their sports and social networks to help further their enterprise, officials said.

"They were using very traditional business principles," Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said. "To take those skills and turn it into this kind of illegal enterprise is very distressing."

Scott, Brooks and several others arrested in the alleged ring were arraigned Monday on drug charges and related counts.

Scott's lawyer declined to comment, saying he hadn't yet reviewed the case.

Brooks' attorney, Greg Pagano, described his client as vulnerable and a bit depressed after leaving the University of Richmond last year due to an unspecified injury. Brooks lives at his family's home in Villanova.

"He, regrettably, lost his way," Pagano said. "His parents are devastated."

Scott, of Haverford, began selling pot after he moved back to the area from San Diego, where he had worked at a medical marijuana dispensary, officials said. Scott told police that he figured the high-quality drug from California "would sell very well on the Main Line because everyone between 15 and 55 loves good weed," an investigator wrote in the affidavit.

Scott began having the drug mailed to Pennsylvania in late 2013 and called his enterprise the "Main Line Take Over Project," authorities said. Officials began an investigation in January based on a tip and eventually executed search warrants at nine locations.

In all, they reported seizing eight pounds of pot, more than $11,000, an assault weapon, two other guns and equipment to manufacture hash oil. Scott has been in custody since February, held on $1 million bail.

Authorities didn't calculate the total value of the operation, but Scott told police he was making about $1,000 per week on marijuana alone, the affidavit said.

Ferman said the investigation continues. So far, eight suspects have been arrested, and authorities say at least three more are involved.

One of the suspects is a current student at The Haverford School and has been suspended indefinitely, said headmaster John Nagl. He said the alleged involvement of the students and two alums is "hugely disappointing."

"Those choices reflect badly on the values the school stands for," Nagl said. "They let down themselves and their families, who've made huge sacrifices to send them to this school."

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