Operation Oxy-Concourse: NY Attorney General’s Office and DEA take down narcotics distribution ring in New York City
Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( Lock A locked padlock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

  • Who We Are
    • About
    • Mission
    • Leadership
    • History
    • Divisions
      • Domestic Divisions
      • Foreign Divisions
      • Operational Divisions
    • DEA Museum
    • Wall of Honor
    • Contact Us
      • Submit a Tip
      • Extortion Scam
      • Public Affairs
      • Social Media Directory
  • What We Do
    • Forensic Sciences
      • GUARDS
      • Forensic Sciences Policy
      • Forensic Science Organizations
      • Forensic Science Contact
    • Law Enforcement
      • DEA Office of Training
        • Office of Training Programs
      • El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC)
      • Intelligence
      • Operations
        • Administrative Law Judges
        • DEA Asset Forfeiture
        • Domestic Cannabis Suppression / Eradication Program
        • HIDTA
        • OCDETF
    • Education and Prevention
      • Family Summit
      • Red Ribbon
      • Kiki and the History of Red Ribbon Week
      • Red Ribbon Toolkit - Resources For Your Community
      • DEA’s Family Summit
      • Operation Engage
      • Community Outreach
      • Just Think Twice
      • Campus Drug Prevention
      • Get Smart About Drugs
      • Operation Prevention
    • Drug Information
      • Drug Policy
      • Drug Scheduling
      • The Controlled Substances Act
    • News
      • Alerts
      • Press Releases
      • Most Wanted Fugitives
        • All Fugitives
      • Stories
      • Events
      • Speeches
      • Testimony
    • Campaigns
      • One Pill Can Kill
        • Senior Citizens
        • Partner Toolbox
        • Social Media Campaign
      • DEA National Prescription Drug Take Back Day
  • Careers
    • Special Agent
      • Special Agent FAQs
    • Diversion Investigator
      • Diversion Investigator Job Announcement
    • Intelligence Research Specialist
      • Intelligence Research Specialist Job Announcements
      • Intelligence Research Specialists FAQs
      • Schedule A Hiring Authority: Intelligence Research Specialist
    • Forensic Sciences Careers
    • Professional & Administrative Careers
    • Student & Entry Level Careers
    • Employment Eligibility
    • How to Apply
      • How To Claim Veterans' Preference
      • Priority Consideration
      • Benefits
      • Veterans and People With Disabilities
      • Operation Warfighter
  • Resources
    • Cartels
    • Illegal Online Pharmacies
    • OD Justice
    • Fentanyl Supply Chain
    • Pill Press Resources
    • Recovery Resources
    • Together for Families
    • Data and Statistics
      • Domestic Arrests
      • Staffing and Budget
    • FOIA
      • About FOIA
      • Contact DEA FOIA
      • Make a Request
      • What Happens After Making a Request
      • Requester Categories
      • Fees Charged
      • Fee Waiver
      • FOIA FAQ
      • FOIA Logs and Reports
      • FOIA Library
      • Additional FOIA Links
      • FOIA Exemptions
      • What Are Exclusions?
      • Privacy Act
      • Privacy Act Exemptions
      • Privacy Impact Assessment and Management Information Systems
    • Publications
    • Media Galleries
    • Victim Witness Assistance Program
      • Victim Witness Assistance Program Resources
      • Human Trafficking Prevention

United States Drug Enforcement Administration

  • Get Updates
  • Scam Alert
  • Full Menu
  • English
  • Español

Main Menu

Explore DEA
  • Who We Are
    • About
    • Mission
    • Leadership
    • History
    • Divisions
    • DEA Museum
    • Wall of Honor
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • Forensic Sciences
    • Law Enforcement
    • Education and Prevention
    • Drug Information
    • News
    • Campaigns
  • Careers
    • Special Agent
    • Diversion Investigator
    • Intelligence Research Specialist
    • Forensic Sciences Careers
    • Professional & Administrative Careers
    • Student & Entry Level Careers
    • Employment Eligibility
    • How to Apply
  • Resources
    • Cartels
    • Illegal Online Pharmacies
    • OD Justice
    • Fentanyl Supply Chain
    • Pill Press Resources
    • Recovery Resources
    • Together for Families
    • Data and Statistics
    • FOIA
    • Publications
    • Media Galleries
    • Victim Witness Assistance Program
  • Submit A Tip

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Operation Oxy-Concourse: NY Attorney General’s Office and DEA take down narcotics distribution ring in New York City

Operation Oxy-Concourse: NY Attorney General’s Office and DEA take down narcotics distribution ring in New York City

May 02, 2019
|
Share Article
|
Download Press Release
For Immediate Release
Contact: Kenneth M. Heino
Phone Number: 862-373-3557

Investigation charges 28-person narcotics operation with conspiring to purchase and sell tens of thousands of dangerous prescription pills resulting in 181-count Indictments

Ray Donovan, DEA Special Agent in Charge, New York Division speaks to the media regarding the dismantlement of a major Oxycodone trafficking network operating in NY and CT
IMG_3712.jpg

BRONX, NY – Ray Donovan, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, New York Division and Attorney General Letitia James today announced the indictment of 28 individuals involved in a large narcotics trafficking ring operating in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Westchester County and Connecticut. This network of oxycodone dealers and resellers were selling tens of thousands of prescription oxycodone pills, to countless customers on a daily basis. The two indictments, unsealed in Bronx County Supreme Court today, charged the 28 alleged co-conspirators with 181-counts of conspiracy, criminal sale of a controlled substance, criminal possession of a controlled substance, and other charges.  

“These arrests are significant because they bring attention to an emerging threat – oxycodone trafficking networks,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Ray Donovan. “Oxycodone pills have replaced heroin glassines on the street, and heroin trafficking rings’ new competition are oxycodone distribution organizations. This criminal motley crew had the means to distribute nearly $2 million dollars’ worth of oxycodone pills annually throughout counties of New York and Connecticut; but as a result of collaborative law enforcement efforts, their operation has been shut down and put out of business.”  

“There is zero tolerance for those who flood our communities with dangerous narcotics that claim lives,” said Attorney General Letitia James. “These individuals allegedly made profit off of prescription drugs and trafficked tens of thousands of highly addictive pills throughout New York City and Westchester. In order to combat the opioid crisis that is destroying our communities, we must tackle the issue from every angle and this investigation is our latest effort to take down those who sell these illicit drugs.”  

Over the course of the ten-month investigation, which was led by the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF), in partnership with the DEA Westchester Tactical Diversion Squad (TDS), authorities seized approximately 1,200 oxycodone pills of varying dosages. During this time, the operation sold over 23,000 oxycodone pills, with a street value exceeding $2 million. Today’s takedown was dubbed “Operation Oxy-Concourse” due to the volume of oxycodone sales in and around Grand Concourse in the Bronx County.  

The investigation included hundreds of hours of physical and covert surveillance, court-authorized wiretapping of numerous target phones, and the review of subpoena compliance including phone and Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement records. During the course of the wiretapping, conspirators frequently utilized coded and cryptic terminology in an attempt to disguise their illicit narcotics trafficking, such as referring to prescription pills as “footballs”, and referring to specific dosages of oxycodone pills based on the color of the pills, for example “yellows”, “pinks” and “blues”, and the milligram dosage, for example “15’s”, “20’s”, “30’s” and “big ones”.      

As alleged in the indictment, members of the criminal network focused their operation on the purchase and resale of prescription oxycodone pills. Elba Sanchez purchased prescriptions for large amounts of oxycodone from over a dozen sources in and around Kings County, and then sold the oxycodone to Wilkins Almonte. Often this was done with the assistance of Michael Sanchez and/or Richard De Pena Rodriguez. Wilkins and Esteban Almonte would then distribute the oxycodone, mainly from within the High Class Barberi in Bronx County, where both brothers worked as barbers. Wilkins Almonte utilized several other Bronx County sources, procuring oxycodone from Dora Sarita-Duran, Jeffrey Tavarez, Yamzi Aquino, Raul Morales, Luis DeJesus and others.  The Almonte brothers had multiple Bronx-based customers, but their largest customers were Joel and Jovany Lopez, who would purchase the bulk oxycodone in the Bronx and re-sell it to dozens of end users in and around Waterbury, Connecticut.  

The investigation uncovered that the organization distributed upwards of 23,000 oxycodone tablets. In each case, it is believed that the pills were paid for multiple times. For example, the initial source would pay $300 each for the doctor visit and the pharmacy (some of which were covered by insurance) for 100 oxycodone tablets (totaling $600).Those sources typically re-sold the 100 pills for approximately $10 per pill ($1,000) to a collecting manager (like Elba Sanchez). The collecting manager would then re-sell those 100 pills for approximately $18 per pill ($1,800) to the distributor (like Wilkins Almonte).The distributor would then re-sell those same 100 pills for approximately $23 per pill ($2,300) to the street-level dealer, who would then sell them to end users for approximately $30 per pill ($3,000). Thus, the average amount of currency transacted from a single 100-tablet prescription was approximately $8,700.  Consequently, it is estimated that the street-value of the oxycodone sold during this 10-month investigation exceeded $2 million.  

The first indictment, unsealed today before Bronx County Acting Supreme Court Judge Ralph Fabrizio, charged 21 individuals, with crimes that include Conspiracy in the Second Degree among other charges, and various counts of “A” and “B” felony Criminal Sale and Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance, including six individuals charged with “A” felony level counts.    

The second indictment charged Elba Sanchez and seven others, with crimes that include Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree, and various counts of “B” felony Criminal Sale and Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance. This second indictment charged these individuals, primarily in Kings County, with filling oxycodone prescriptions on a monthly basis, and then selling them to Elba Sanchez.  

This takedown marks the latest drug bust since the launching of the Attorney General’s SURGE Initiative (Suburban and Upstate Response to the Growing Epidemic) on New York’s growing – and often violent – heroin, opioid, and narcotics trafficking networks. Since launching in 2017, SURGE has taken 465 alleged traffickers off the streets.    

The Attorney General would like to thank the Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, and the U.S. Army National Guard Counterdrug Task Force for their assistance in this investigation.   

The investigation was directed by OCTF Investigators Kyle Vitale-O’Sullivan and Sixto Santiago, under the supervision of Supervising Investigator Bradford Miller and Downstate OCTF Deputy Chief Christopher Vasta with the assistance of OCTF Legal Analyst Stephanie Tirado and members of the DEA Westchester TDS. The Attorney General’s Investigations Bureau is led by Acting Chief Investigator John Reidy.  

The case is being prosecuted by OCTF Assistant Deputy Attorney General Thomas Luzio. Nicole Keary is the Deputy Attorney General in Charge of the Organized Crime Task Force. The Criminal Justice Division is led by Chief Deputy Attorney General José Maldonado.  

The charges against the defendants are merely accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. 

 

Download Press Release
###
US Department of Justice - Drug Enforcement Administration

Drug Enforcement Administration

Frank A. Tarentino III Special Agent in Charge - New York
@DEANewYorkDiv
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Email
  • Who We Are
    • About
    • Domestic Divisions
    • Foreign Offices
    • Contact Us
    • DEA Museum
  • What We Do
    • Forensic Sciences
    • Law Enforcement
    • Drug Prevention
    • Diversion Control Division
    • News
  • Careers
    • Special Agent
    • Diversion Investigator
    • Forensic Sciences
    • Intelligence Research Specialist
    • How to Apply
  • Resources
    • Drug Information
    • Employee Assistance Program
    • FOIA
    • Publications
    • Media Galleries
    • VWAP
  • Doing Business
    with the DEA
    • Overview
    • Current Vendors
    • Prospective Vendors
    • Security Clauses
    • Security Forms
    • Small Business Program
    • Vendor Engagement Request
  • Policies
    • Accessibility & Policy
    • Legal Policies & Disclaimers
    • No FEAR Act
    • Privacy Policy
    • U.S. Department of Justice EEO Policy
    • USA.gov
    • Whistleblower Protection
    • Your Rights as a Federal Employee

United States Drug Enforcement Administration

DEA.gov is an official site of the U.S. Department of Justice
Facebook X LinkedIn Instagram

DEA Contact Center

(202) 307-1000
Contact the Webmaster