Press Release
    
    Wyoming Couple Sentenced To A Total Of 17 Years’ Prison On Oxycodone Distribution And Money Laundering Charges
          For Immediate Release
                      
      
              U.S. Attorney's Office,               Southern District of West Virginia
            
                    
                   
Couple  received thousands of pain pills by mail from Florida; deposited more than $300,000 in bank as payment  
BECKLEY, W.Va. – A Wyoming County  couple was sentenced to a total of 17 years in federal prison for conspiracy to  distribute oxycodone and money laundering charges, announced U.S. Attorney  Booth Goodwin.  Christopher Brooks, 36, was sentenced to ten years in  prison.  Brooks’ co-defendant and wife  Jennifer Brooks, 29, both of Glen Fork, Wyoming County, was sentenced to seven  years in prison.  The sentences were  handed down today by United States District Judge Irene C. Berger in  Beckley.  Both defendants previously pleaded guilty in February.  
From at least March 2010 until April  27, 2012, Mr. and Ms. Brooks received packages by mail containing oxycodone  from a known individual located in Tampa, Fla. Mr. and Ms. Brooks received at  least 130 express mail packages containing approximately 17,000 30-milligram  oxycodone tablets between October 15, 2010 and April 27, 2012.  Mr. and Ms. Brooks deposited at least  $300,000 cash into bank accounts that were owned and controlled by a known  individual in exchange for the oxycodone tablets. 
In a related matter, Keith Keiffer,  32, of Calvin, Nicholas County, was sentenced last month to four years in  federal prison for his role in an oxycodone distribution and money laundering  scheme.  During the scheme, Keiffer  received at least 15 express mail packages that contained a total of  approximately 1,400 30-milligram oxycodone tablets from an individual located  in Tampa, Fla. In exchange for the oxycodone tablets, Keiffer deposited at  least $30,000 into bank accounts that were owned and controlled by his pill  source of supply.
The Southern Regional Drug and  Violent Crime Task Force, the  U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal  Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Wyoming County  Sheriff’s Department conducted the investigations.  Assistant United  States Attorney Haley Bunn handled the prosecutions.  
The cases were prosecuted as part of  an ongoing effort led by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern  District of West Virginia to combat the illicit sale and misuse of prescription  drugs.  The U.S. Attorney’s Office, joined by federal, state and local law  enforcement agencies, is committed to aggressively pursuing and shutting down  illegal pill trafficking, eliminating open air drug markets, and curtailing the  spread of opiate painkillers in communities across the Southern District.  
Updated January 7, 2015
    
                Component      
            
          