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Press Release
Press Release
MIDLAND, Texas – A former ranking member of the Texas Mexican Mafia was sentenced in federal court in Midland to 180 months in prison for six counts of possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
According to court documents, Paul Lujan, 42, of Odessa, was a well-known gang member who had been the subject of several Odessa Police Department investigations over the years. Beginning in October 2024, Lujan sold cocaine on six different occasions as part of a controlled-purchase operation by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). After the sixth transaction, on Dec. 23, 2024, Lujan was pulled over, denied the officer’s request to search his truck, and refused numerous requests to exit his vehicle. Lujan was ultimately detained and a K9 conducted an open-air sniff search, alerting to the presence of narcotics inside the truck. Inside the vehicle, the officer located marijuana and a syringe containing a clear liquid substance. A passenger in Lujan’s vehicle was found to have cocaine in his waistband.
Lujan was arrested during the Dec. 23 traffic stop and indicted by a federal grand jury for six counts of possession with intent to distribute cocaine on Jan. 22. He pleaded guilty to all six charges on March 31. At the sentencing hearing on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge David Counts granted the United States’ motion for an upward departure from Lujan’s guideline range, noting Lujan’s extremely violent criminal history. Following his 15 years in federal prison, Lujan will serve a six-year term of supervised release.
“This successful outcome was possible because we and our partners were able to prove that Lujan not only committed half a dozen federal drug trafficking offenses in just two months but also had a significant history of violence for which he had yet to be held properly accountable,” said U.S. Attorney Justin R. Simmons. “Thanks to the partnership from various law enforcement resources at the local, state, and federal levels, this violent criminal is finally being held accountable. A violent, career criminal who had operated with near impunity for years will have to spend the next decade and a half in a federal prison.”
“This is a perfect example of how drug trafficking and violence are evil bed fellows,” said Special Agent in Charge Omar Arellano for the DEA El Paso Division. “One of DEA’s strategic priorities is to reduce violent crime fueled by drug trafficking. We thank our state and local partners who helped us do exactly that in this case.”
The DEA, Odessa Police Department, Midland Police Department and Texas Department of Public Safety investigated the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Patrick Sloane and Kevin Cayton prosecuted the case.
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