|
News
Release [print-friendly
version]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 21, 2006
North Franklin Man Sentenced On Federal Heroin Charge
June
W. Stansbury, Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration
in New England and Kevin J. O’Connor, United States Attorney for
the District of Connecticut, today announced that MICHAEL STOKES, age
46, of North Franklin, Connecticut, was sentenced today by Senior United
States District Judge Alfred V. Covello in Hartford, to 12 months and
one day of imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release. On
June 2, 2006, STOKES pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess
with intent to distribute heroin.
This matter stems from an Organized
Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (“OCDETF”) investigation dubbed “Operation
SAPO,” which
began in late 2004 and was spearheaded by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. On
August 10, 2005, a federal grand jury sitting in Hartford returned and
18-count indictment charging 23 individuals with various narcotics offenses,
primarily related to the distribution of heroin.
According to documents filed with the
Court and statements made in court, beginning in the fall of 2004, the DEA began
an investigation of Luis
Camacho, a drug trafficker operating in Southbridge, Massachusetts. Following
several controlled purchases of narcotics, including heroin, cocaine
and methamphetamine, from Camacho, a wiretap investigation of Camacho
began in late March 2005. During the course of that wiretap, it
was quickly learned that Camacho’s heroin supplier was Alfredo
Aguilar of Willimantic. A subsequent wiretap investigation of Aguilar
revealed that he operated an extensive heroin trafficking operation involving
several other Willimantic-area residents, and that Aguilar was supplied
with approximately one-half of one kilogram of heroin on a monthly basis
by Jose del los Santos Rubio Betancurth of Hartford and Juan Carlos Velez
of New Britain, which Aguilar and others redistributed.
STOKES was intercepted over the wiretap
on multiple occasions ordering redistribution quantities of heroin from Aguilar.
Searches at the conclusion of the
four-month wiretap investigation resulted in the seizure of approximately 2
kilograms of cocaine, 350 grams of
heroin, 400 grams of methamphetamine, two handguns and cash.
Camacho, Aguilar, Betancurth and Velez
have pleaded guilty to various narcotics trafficking charges and each awaits
sentencing.
Willimantic is a Department of Justice
recognized and funded Weed and Seed site. Weed and Seed is a Department
of Justice strategy that aims to prevent, control, and reduce violent crime,
drug abuse, and gang
activity in targeted high-crime neighborhoods across the country. Law
enforcement agencies and prosecutors cooperate in “weeding out” criminals
who participate in violent crime and drug abuse, attempting to prevent
their return to the targeted area. “Seeding” brings
human services to the area, encompassing prevention, intervention, treatment,
and neighborhood revitalization.
This
investigation was a collaborative effort of the Drug Enforcement Administration
Hartford Resident Office, which included members of the
Hartford, East Hartford, Southington, Manchester and West Hartford Police
Departments, the Willimantic Police Department, the Connecticut State
Police, Massachusetts State Police, the Southbridge, Massachusetts Police
Department, the DEA Worcester, Massachusetts Resident Office, the State’s
Attorney’s Office for the Judicial District of Windham and the
United States Attorney’s Office.
|