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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 4, 2004
Grand
Jury Indicts Three On Federal Drug Charges
Mark R. Trouville, 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, announced that a federal
grand jury sitting in New Haven today indicted three men on conspiracy
and cocaine possession charges.
The Indictment charges RANDALL REDD, age 33, of Apartment 2G, 680 Mix Avenue,
Hamden,
Connecticut; ANSON McPHAIL, age 28, of the Blue Cliff Apartments, Apartment 39,
7 Mountain Ridge Terrace, New Haven, Connecticut; and DENNIS RODRIGUEZ, age 33,
of 395 Main Avenue, Passaic, New Jersey, with one count of conspiring to possess
with the intent to distribute and to distribute more than 500 grams of cocaine,
one count of possessionwith intent to distribute more than 500 grams of cocaine,
and one count of using a cellular telephone to facilitate a drug trafficking
offense.
If convicted, the defendants could be sentenced to serve a mandatory
minimum term of 10 years and up to a maximum term of life imprisonment,
and a fine of up to $4,000,000 on both the conspiracy and the possession
counts. If convicted on the telephone count, they could be sentenced
to a maximum of four years imprisonment and fined up to $250,000. In
addition to the drug charges, RODRIGUEZ was also charged with possessing
a 9-mm semi-automatic pistol in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense.
If convicted, he could be sentenced to an additional mandatory minimum
of five years, which would have to be served consecutively to
any sentence imposed on the drug charges.
The defendants were arrested on February 24, 2004, by agents and officers of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation Safe Streets Task Force after RODRIGUEZ
traveled to Connecticut from New Jersey to deliver a kilogram of cocaine to
REDD and McPHAIL. Both REDD and McPHAIL have been detained without bond by
United States Magistrate Judge Joan G. Margolis. RODRIGUEZ has since been released
on a $250,000 bond.
In announcing the indictment, U.S. Attorney O'Connor stressed that an indictment
is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. Each defendant is entitled to
a fair trial in which it will be the Government's burden to prove guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt.
Mr. O'Connor commended the agents of the,the Drug Enforcement Administration,
Federal Bureau of Investigation and the officers assigned to the Safe Streets
Task Force for their investigative efforts in this case.
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