News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 8, 2004
Participants
in Major
Cocaine Distribution Ring Sentenced
Some
Defendants Face Up to Life Imprisonment Without Parole
DEC
10-- United States Attorney Richard B. Roper announced today
that all defendants who were charged and convicted in the large cocaine
conspiracy case, U.S. v. Juan Pablo Elizondo, et al. have been sentenced.
The last two defendants were sentenced today.
The
North Texas High Intensity Drug Trafficking Task Force investigated
the drug trafficking activities of Juan Pablo Elizondo and other members
of his organization which operated from Laredo, Texas, to Dallas, and
into Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Ohio.
Elizondo, using
a network of individuals to store, transport and distribute cocaine,
supplied large amounts of cocaine to the Ellis County, Texas, area,
and to the Ardmore, Oklahoma area. Beginning in July 2003, numerous
arrests were made in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, as well as in Laredo,
Texas, and Ardmore, Oklahoma. Since that time, 23 defendants have been
convicted in the conspiracy and all have been sentenced to federal
prison for terms ranging from two years to life imprisonment, without
parole.
The organization
distributed kilogram-quantities of cocaine in Texas, Ohio and Mississippi.
In May 2004, five defendants were convicted in a trial in Dallas for
their role in the conspiracy. Millions of dollars in U.S. currency,
over one hundred kilograms of cocaine, and several weapons, including
fully automatic assault weapons, were seized during this investigation
and forfeited to the government.
United States Attorney
Roper praised the exceptionally coordinated efforts of local, state
and federal law enforcement, including the North Texas High Intensity
Drug Trafficking Task Force; the Drug Enforcement Administration; the
Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Dallas County District Attorney’s
Office; the Dallas, Carrollton, Coppell, Irving, Lancaster, and Richardson
Police Departments; the Ellis and Dallas County Sheriff’s Offices;
the Texas Department of Public Safety; and the Internal Revenue Service
- Criminal Investigation.
Mr. Roper said, “Strategic
coordinated law enforcement efforts stopped this major cocaine trafficking
operation dead in its tracks. Drug traffickers should be warned, with
law enforcement efforts like this, they don’t stand a chance.”
The case was prosecuted
by Assistant United States Attorneys Dan Guess, Jerri Sims, and Felicia
Moncrief.
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