Press Release
Three More Defendants Sentenced for Participation in Cocaine and Crack Conspiracy
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Pennsylvania
PITTSBURGH – Three residents of the Western District of Pennsylvania were sentenced yesterday in federal court for violating federal narcotics laws, United States Attorney Scott W. Brady announced today.
United States District Judge David Stewart Cercone sentenced Jack Brown, 37, of Pittsburgh, to serve 24 months in prison and pay a $2,500 fine following his guilty plea to one count of conspiracy. Judge Cercone also sentenced Dwight Wright, 41, of Canonsburg, and Kenya Mickens, 40, of Pittsburgh, to serve one day in federal custody each, followed by 12 months and 10 months, respectively, of a combination of community and home confinement. Wright was also ordered to pay a $3,000 fine. Wright and Mickens, like Brown, previously pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy.
In connection with his earlier guilty plea, Brown admitted that from in and around April 2016, and continuing thereafter to in and around October 2016, he conspired with others, including Mickens and Wright, to distribute and possess with intent to distribute cocaine, a Schedule II controlled substance. At the time of his guilty plea, Brown admitted that he was responsible for between 500 grams and 2 kilograms of powder cocaine during the conspiracy. Likewise, during their plea colloquies, Mickens and Wright admitted that they were each responsible for between 100 and 200 grams of cocaine.
Brown, Mickens, and Wright were charged as part of a nine-defendant indictment returned by a federal grand jury on August 1, 2017. To date, six defendants have pleaded guilty.
Assistant United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan is prosecuting this case on behalf of the government.
A federally administered Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) conducted the investigation leading to the Indictment in this case. The task force is headed by the Drug Enforcement Administration and comprises members drawn from the Borough of Baldwin Police Department, McKees Rocks Police Department, Munhall Police Department, Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office, Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, and the Pennsylvania State Police. The Stowe Township Police Department also provided assistance in this investigation. The OCDETF program supplies critical federal funding and coordination that allows federal and state agencies to work together to successfully identify, investigate, and prosecute major interstate and international drug trafficking organizations and other criminal enterprises.
Updated August 21, 2018
Topic
Drug Trafficking
Component