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Press Release
BOSTON – A Dominican national was sentenced today in federal court in Worcester for his role in a heroin and cocaine trafficking conspiracy.
Hugo Santana-Dones, a/k/a Raphael Jose Ventura, 43, a Dominican national previously residing in Leominster, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Timothy S. Hillman to 80 months in prison and will face deportation upon completion of his sentence.
In May 2017, Santana-Dones pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute, and to distribute, 100 grams or more of heroin and 500 grams or more of cocaine; one count of distribution and possession with the intent to distribute 100 or more grams of heroin; and one count of possession with the intent to distribute 500 or more grams of cocaine and 100 or more grams of heroin.
Santana-Dones is the first of five co-defendants to be sentenced for their roles in the heroin and cocaine trafficking conspiracy which occurred primarily in Worcester County. Osvaldo Vasquez, 49, of Worcester; Jose Federico Vasquez, 55, a Dominican national residing in Providence, R.I.; Elvis Genao, 27, of Fitchburg; and Feliz Melendez, 41, of Leominster, have all pleaded guilty to their involvement in the conspiracy and will be sentenced later this month.
In the late summer of 2014, federal agents began investigating narcotics trafficking activities by Osvaldo Vasquez and his associates, Federico Vasquez, Melendez, Genao, and Santana-Dones. Between November 2014 and July 2015, with the help of a cooperating witness, agents made numerous recorded purchases of heroin - sometimes laced with fentanyl - from members of the conspiracy, seizing over 400 grams of heroin as a result.
During a court-authorized wiretap, Vasquez and his co-defendants were heard discussing the purchase and sale of multiple kilograms of narcotics, and, demonstrated an awareness of the potential deadly consequences of the narcotics they were distributing. On May 7, 2016, Osvaldo Vasquez, Melendez, and Federico Vasquez were intercepted discussing how the high number of heroin overdose deaths occurring at the time were cutting into their sales.
In August 2015, federal agents executed a search warrant at the conspirators’ homes. At Osvaldo Vasquez’s home in Worcester, agents found 679 grams of heroin and 723 grams of cocaine, as well as a Taurus PT .380 semi-automatic handgun. The telephone that was the subject of the wiretap, cutting tools, and over $7,000 in cash was also recovered in the home. At the residence of Santana-Dones in Leominster, agents found 224 grams of heroin, 110 grams of cocaine, and 8.9 grams of cocaine base (crack cocaine), along with cutting tools, a hydraulic kilogram press, over $1,300 in cash, and two phones that had been intercepted on the wiretap. At the residence of Melendez, who was on parole for state firearm and narcotics charges at the time, 3.1 grams of cocaine, a digital scale, over $1,000 in cash, and a phone that had been intercepted on the wiretap was recovered. At the residence of Jose Federico Vasquez in Providence, agents found 3.4 grams of cocaine.
Acting United States Attorney William D. Weinreb; Michael J. Ferguson, Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, New England Field Division; Colonel Richard D. McKeon, Superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police; Worcester Police Chief Steven M. Sargent; Fitchburg Police Chief Ernest F. Martineau; and Leominster Interim Police Chief Michael Goldman, made the announcement today. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark J. Grady of Weinreb’s Worcester Branch Office is prosecuting the case.