News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 20, 2006
Two
in Rhode Island are guilty in heroin conspiracy
A federal jury
has found Roberto E. Olivo guilty of trafficking in more than
a kilogram of heroin. A codefendant, Ancelmo A. Castillo, previously
pled guilty to his role in the conspiracy, in which about a kilogram
of heroin was brought to Rhode Island from New York.
June W. Stansbury,
Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration in New
England and United States Attorney Robert Clark Corrente announced
the guilty verdicts, which the jury returned yesterday after a two-day
trial before Chief U.S. District Court Judge Ernest C. Torres in U.S.
District Court, Providence. The jury deliberated for about five hours.
During the trial,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Sandra R. Beckner presented evidence that,
in May, DEA Task Force agents developed information that a shipment
of heroin would be driven from New York to be delivered to Castillo
in Providence and then sold. On May 27, agents set up surveillance
outside Castillo’s home on Hempstead Street in Providence. They
observed Olivo arrive in a station wagon, take out a black garbage
bag and hand it to Castillo.
Agents followed
Castillo as he drove to a pharmacy on Elmwood Avenue, where he was
to meet with another man to sell the heroin, and arrested Castillo.
Hidden under the front seat of his car was the garbage bag, which contained
approximately 981 grams of heroin.
Agents then arrested
Olivo, who admitted that he had delivered the heroin. Agents also found
a secret compartment in the rear of Olivo’s station wagon.
The jury found
Olivo, 29, guilty of two charges: conspiracy to distribute more than
a kilogram of heroin and possessing with intent to distribute more
than 100 grams of heroin. In August, Castillo, 43, pled guilty to the
same two charges. Both face a minimum penalty of ten years in prison
and a maximum of life plus a $4,000,000 fine.
Olivo and Castillo
are detained pending sentencing, which is scheduled for January.
The Drug Enforcement
Administration and the DEA Task Force investigated the case. Detectives
from the Newport, Pawtucket, Providence, East Providence, Warwick,
Middletown and Bristol police departments are assigned to the Task
Force.
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