DEA: Man Pleads Guilty to Significant Heroin and Cocaine Conspiracy Involving Mexican Drug Cartel

SEP 17 (BURLINGTON, Vt.) – Michael J. Ferguson Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration for New England and Eric Miller United States Attorney for the District of Vermont announced that David Baez Garcia, age 49, a citizen of the Dominican Republic, has pleaded guilty in front of Chief Judge Christina Reiss in the U.S. District Court in Burlington to a conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine, 100 grams or more of heroin and oxycodone from in or about Summer 2009 through in or about June 2010.

According to documents filed with the Court and testimony from a jury trial that took place starting on September 9, 2015, Baez Garcia, who also used the names Josue Ortiz and Jose Altagracia Ramirez Beltre, came to Rutland, Vermont in 2008. With the assistance of Alexis Jimenez and Florencio Reyes, who he met in New Hampshire, Baez Garcia brought hundreds of grams of heroin and multiple kilograms of cocaine into Vermont during the time frame of the conspiracy. Rauddys Barias Tejeda, of Providence, Rhode Island, supplied the heroin, which in total reached kilogram levels, as well as some of the cocaine. In 2009, Baez Garcia also received multi-kilogram shipments of cocaine from two brothers-in-law, Canciano Marquez Mayorga and Candelario Tovar Garcia, who, in turn, were receiving the cocaine from a Mexican drug cartel. After obtaining the cocaine from across the United States-Mexican border in Arizona, Marquez Mayorga and Tovar Garcia, then residing in Manchester, New Hampshire, had it shipped across the country in tractor trailers for redistribution in Vermont and New Hampshire, among other locations. The Vermont group received the final shipment of 10 kilograms of cocaine, worth in excess of $300,000, in late 2009. It traveled across country via tractor trailer to Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Thereafter, it was stored in Worcester, Massachusetts en route to Vermont. Law enforcement seized three kilograms of this shipment during a traffic stop in Massachusetts on December 15, 2009 when it was being transported to Vermont.

As the United States Attorney’s Office stated in its filings, none of these men had any connection to Vermont prior to engaging in drug trafficking here. “Collectively, these men preyed upon addicted individuals in the Rutland area, as well as in other places, for their own profit.”

Baez Garcia pleaded guilty to the charged conspiracy five days into the jury trial. Thereafter, the jury trial was discontinued. According to the plea agreement filed with the Court, Baez Garcia has agreed to serve between 15 and 18 years in jail for his crime.

As a result of the broader investigation, the United States Attorney’s Office has convicted 17 defendants associated with this drug conspiracy, including Baez Garcia. This includes Alexis Jimenez, age 48, of Nashua, New Hampshire, Florencio Reyes, age 46, of Worcester, Massachusetts, Canciano Marquez Mayorga, age 29, Candelario Tovar Garcia, age 43, and Rauddys Barias Tejeda, age 43.
The United States also has convicted Justine Durfee, Jessica Lever, Thomas Morrissey, Peter Stout, Samantha Thuman, and Danielle Jankowski, of Rutland, Vermont. These individuals were involved in supporting the drug conspiracy by delivering drugs, providing housing, registering vehicles, or doing other tasks related to the conspiracy for Baez Garcia. In addition, the United States has convicted Edgar Corona and Ramiro Reyes of Worcester, Massachusetts, and Roberto Melendez and Elijah Kleinhans, of Lebanon, New Hampshire for their roles in delivering drugs or otherwise assisting the drug conspiracy. Letitia Carstensen, of Milton, Vermont, also was convicted of drug charges related to her involvement into drug distribution with her then-boyfriend, Alexis Jimenez.

This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration with assistance from the Southern Vermont Drug Task Force, the Vermont State Police, and the Burlington Police Department. United States Attorney Eric Miller commends the exemplary work of the federal, state and local law enforcement agencies investigating this matter.

SOURCE: http://www.dea.gov/divisions/bos/2015/bos091715.shtml

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CHICAGO (AP) — The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s…

DEAAPNewsBreak: Chicago DEA chief heading to DC. FILE – In this Dec. 11, 2012 file photo, Jack Riley, center, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration in Chicago, points out local Mexican drug cartel problem areas on a map in Chicago. Riley who has been outspoken about the growing influence of Mexican cartels in the American heartland is leaving Chicago to take one of the agency’s top posts in Washington, D.C. Riley has been named as the DEA’s new chief of operations and will be responsible for overseeing all agency law enforcement within the United States and international. Photo: M. Spencer Green, AP

CHICAGO (AP) — The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration's...APNewsBreak: Chicago DEA chief heading to DC.

CHICAGO (AP) — The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Chicago division, who has drawn attention to the growing influence of Mexican cartels in the American heartland, is leaving to take one of the agency’s top posts in Washington, D.C., a DEA official said Tuesday.

Jack Riley, 56, has been named the DEA’s new chief of operations — considered the federal agency’s No. 3 position — and will oversee all agency enforcement activities within the U.S. and internationally, Rusty Payne, a spokesman with the DEA in Washington, told The Associated Press.

In an interview at his office Tuesday, Riley said the two biggest changes in the trafficking landscape since he came to Chicago in 2010 have been the entrenchment of Mexico’s cartels in the Midwest and the resurgence of heroin, including in suburban neighborhoods.

Heroin has become more popular, in part, because it’s now available in easier-to-use powder form and can be snorted rather than having to be injected with needles, he explained.

« People who never would have done heroin are doing it today, » Riley said.

As the special agent in charge in Chicago, Riley has directed DEA operations in Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Minnesota and North Dakota. His previous posts included head of the agency’s El Paso, Texas, office.

In recent years, Riley highlighted how Mexican cartel operatives had pushed deep inside the U.S., including Chicago, which has become a hub through which the syndicates distribute drugs farther afield.

« They’ve cemented themselves, » Riley said.

Riley also backed the creation of a Chicago Strike Force headquarters, which opened last year. At the new facility, federal agents, police and prosecutors work together year-round, often targeting the point of contact between cartel-backed traffickers and local gangs who serve as street-level salesmen.

In 2013, Riley joined the non-governmental Chicago Crime Commission in naming Sinaloa cartel boss Joaquin « El Chapo » Guzman, as the city’s new Public Enemy No. 1 — the same label once assigned to gangster Al Capone.

Mexican authorities captured Guzman earlier this year; they haven’t indicated whether he might be extradited to face trial in Chicago or another American city.

Riley is expected to begin his new job next month. His replacement in Chicago has not been named.

SOURCE: http://www.mynextfone.co.uk/breaking-news/chicago-ap-the-head-of-the-drug-enforcement-administrations-h26851.html

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DEA reports ‘big’ heroin bust in Salt Lake Valley

DEA(KUTV) The Drug Enforcement Administration said it was hidden in soles of shoes, pop-up car cup holders—but now, 31 pounds of heroin linked to a Mexican drug cartel are no longer headed to feed Utah addictions.

« This is a big deal, » said Nicki Hollmann, DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge for Utah.  « There are significant supplies of heroin coming into Utah than were coming in a decade ago. »

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SALT LAKE CITY — Federal drug agents have seized 31 pounds of heroin and more than 21 suspects have been arrested in a series of drug busts across the Salt Lake Valley.

The busts have put a dent in the drug trade and importation of heroin in Utah, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said at a Thursday news conference.

“There are significant drug trafficking organizations operating from Mexico and our southern borders and supplying Utah with significant amounts of heroin,” said Nicki Hollmann, the assistant special agent-in-charge of the DEA.

The busts were carried out across the valley from February until now with a majority of the arrests being made in April.

Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill said charges for those arrested ranged from drug distribution to racketeering.

more: http://fox13now.com/2014/08/21/31-lbs-of-heroin-seized-in-major-drug-bust-in-the-sl-valley/

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