| News
Release
April 5, 2005
Massachusetts
Man Pleads Guilty to Charges of Manufacturing Methamphetamine
Kevin M. Foley, Acting Special
Agent in Charge of DEA’s Washington
Division announced today that Steven Winfield Tomershea, age 40, of Foxboro,
Massachusetts, pled guilty in federal court in the Western District of
Virginia to charges of manufacturing methamphetamine and conspiracy to
manufacture and distribute methamphetamine.
These charges arose
out of an investigation into methamphetamine manufacturing operations
in Washington County, Virginia that began in 2002 and culminated in
the arrest of Tomershea at the site of a methamphetamine laboratory in Meadowview,
Virginia on April 11, 2004. The investigation revealed that Tomershea, who
was
residing in Sweetwater, Tennessee, throughout the this time period, manufactured
methamphetamine in Tennessee and at various locations in Washington and Grayson
counties, Virginia, for distribution in Southwest Virginia.
It was determined
that between 2001 and April 2004, Tomershea manufactured more than
50 pounds of methamphetamine, earning in excess of $300,000. A significant
amount of this methamphetamine was sold in and around Washington County,
Virginia
or traded for precursor chemicals necessary for manufacturing methamphetamine.
Individuals who distributed methamphetamine for Tomershea also learned to
manufacture from him. Since 2003, at least five co-conspirators who
sold methamphetamine
for Tomershea, or supplied him with precursor chemicals, have been convicted
on federal drug manufacturing charges stemming from methamphetamine laboratories
in Washington and Smyth counties, Virginia. Cases against two other alleged
co-conspirators
are awaiting trial.
Tomershea faces
a mandatory minimum penalty of 20 years imprisonment and a maximum
penalty of life imprisonment and/or a fine of $8,000,000. He is
scheduled
to
be sentenced on
June 21, 2005 in the federal courthouse in Abingdon, Virignia.
This case was investigated
by DEA’s Bristol Post of Duty, the Washington
County Sheriff’s Office, and the Virginia State Police. The case was prosecuted
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer R. Bockhorst. |