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Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 17, 2005
MASSACHUSETTS
MAN SENTENCED TO
10 YEARS FOR TRAFFICKING COCAINE
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, announced that JAIME MENDEZ, age 41,
of Revere, Massachusetts, was sentenced today by United States District
Judge Stefan R. Underhill in Bridgeport to 120 months of imprisonment,
followed by five years of
supervised release, for conspiring to possess with intent to distribute
more than five kilograms of cocaine. MENDEZ pleaded guilty to the charge
on November 22, 2004.
On October 26, 2000, MENDEZ was arrested on the Massachusetts Turnpike
when Massachusetts State Troopers pulled over the van he was driving
for a routine traffic violation. A subsequent search of the van revealed
ten kilograms of cocaine in the back seat. The stop sparked a lengthy
investigation by Drug Enforcement Administration agents in Connecticut
that resulted in a multi-count indictment charging numerous
individuals, including members of a Colombian drug cartel, with drug
conspiracy
charges. The investigation revealed that the ten kilograms found in
MENDEZ's vehicle were transferred to MENDEZ and the passenger of the
van,
David Taborda, in Stamford, Connecticut, and had emanated from a drug
cartel in Colombia. The investigation further revealed efforts by the
drug cartel to recoup its loss following the seizure of the drugs by
Massachusetts State Troopers.
MENDEZ proceeded to trial on state charges in Massachusetts and was
convicted in August 2001. MENDEZ's conviction was subsequently
overturned by a Massachusetts appellate court based on a conflict of
interest of
his trial counsel, and a new trial was ordered. MENDEZ was pending
retrial in Massachusetts when the U.S. Attorney's Office in Connecticut
re-instituted its charges against MENDEZ.
Since MENDEZ's arrest, four people have pleaded guilty in Connecticut
to the drug conspiracy charge, including Taborda, Hector Dario Puerta
and Johny
Diez. All have received ten-year sentences from Judge Underhill.
Special Agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration in Connecticut
investigated the case.
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