AKRON, Ohio — Summit County prosecutors say they found even more money than the $762,000 in cash seized from a Cuyahoga Falls barbershop owner accused of dealing drugs on the honor system.

Assistant Summit County Prosecutor Joe Dangelo filed a civil forfeiture complaint asking a judge to allow prosecutors to seize more than $1.35 million from Scott Fogel, 46, a sex offender charged with drug trafficking.

The filing says investigators found Fogel had the money stashed inside his home and in bank accounts despite claiming to earn between $26,000 and $34,000 annually between 2011 and 2013.

Prosecutors are also trying to seize a 2007 Pontiac G6, a 1999 Honda Shadow, a 2005 Honda Element, a 1999 Suzuki motorcycle and a 2010 Toyota Camry.

The filing also details new information about Fogel's operation. Fogel admitted to investigators that he sold marijuana after initially denying the accusation, the filing says.

Prosecutors also accuse Fogel of selling prescription painkillers. Cellphone records obtained by investigators show Fogel sold drugs to several customers, the filing says.

Fogel told investigators that he regularly buys a half-pound of marijuana from a supplier in Canton. He said he usually spends between $2,000-$2,200 on the drugs, court records say.

Fogel then sold the drugs by placing marijuana in his barbeque grill in the backyard of his 10th Street home and painkillers in a Vespa scooter, according to court records. Customers then took the drugs and replaced them with the proper compensation.

Fogel also made drug deals out of Mel's Barbershop, which he owns, according to court records.

Investigators raided his home on Sept. 23 and found $762,537 in cash stored in safes, closets, clothes pockets, Rubbermaid containers, tote bags, coffee cans and baskets in the basement, attic and the safe room, court records say.

Drug-sniffing dogs detected marijuana on the cash seized, the filing says.

Fogel's father, Mel Fogel, the original owner of the barbershop, told investigators that he kept "a couple hundred" thousand dollars inside the home, according to the filing. His son denied that anyone else kept money inside his home.

Mel Fogel also told investigators that all of his son's money could not have come from the barbershop alone.