News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 3, 2006
California
Truck Driver Sentenced on Federal Drug Charges
Worcester,
MA... A Los Angeles truck driver was convicted and sentenced on Thursday,
March 30, 2006 in federal court on federal drug offenses.
June W. Stansbury,
Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
in New England, United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan and Kenneth
W. Kaiser, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
in New England; announced that ROMELIO SALAZAR-SALGUERO, age 39, formerly
of Los Angeles, California, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge
F. Dennis Saylor, IV to one count of conspiracy to distribute over
100 grams of heroin, and two counts of distributing over 100 grams
of heroin. At the same hearing, Judge Saylor sentenced SALAZAR-SALGUERO
to 37 months in prison. SALAZAR-SALGUERO will be deported to Guatemala
following the completion of his prison sentence.
At Thursday’s
plea hearing, the prosecutor told the Court that, had the case proceeded
to trial, the Government’s evidence would have proven that on
July 10, 2003, SALAZAR-SALGUERO and co-conspirator David Gonzalez,
distributed a half kilogram of heroin to members of the FBI drug task
force at the King Arthur Motel in Chelsea, Massachusetts. SALAZAR-SALGUERO
and Gonzalez had driven from California to Massachusetts in a tractor-trailer
truck to deliver a truck load of produce and sold the heroin to task
force undercover agents during their stop over in Chelsea. During the
deal, Gonzalez handled the negotiations and the transaction while SALAZAR-SALGUERO
acted as a look-out.
SALAZAR-SALGUERO
and Gonzalez returned to Massachusetts on July 23, 2003 and arranged
to sell another half kilogram of heroin to DEA task force members at
the Massachusetts Turnpike rest area located in Charlton, Massachusetts.
SALAZAR-SALGUERO and Gonzalez were arrested while delivering the heroin
to the undercover task force members.
Gonzalez pleaded
guilty on May 18, 2005 and is scheduled to be sentenced on April 6,
2006, at 3:00 p.m. Gonzalez faces a minimum mandatory term of imprisonment
of 5 years, and a maximum term of 40 years, to be followed by 4 years
of supervised release, and a $2 million fine.
Both defendants
have been in custody since their arrest on July 23, 2003.
The investigation
was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Drug Task Force
and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Drug Task Force. |