Dayton Daily News

Middletown, Monroe police help DEA in major drug bust

7, including Mexican chemist, charged in meth conspiracy.

- By Mark Gokavi Staff Writer

A Mexican chemist allegedly overseeing operations of a drug traffickin­g conspiracy and caught with more than 140 pounds of methamphet­amine is among seven more defendants in what the U.S. Attorney’s Office calls a Dayton-based, cartel-linked organizati­on.

An unsealed supersedin­g indictment filed in Dayton’s U.S. District Court alleged the defendants — two of whom remain fugitives — of six counts including possession with intent to distribute more than 500 grams of meth, more than 400 grams of fentanyl, more than 100 grams of heroin and money laundering.

“We’re not talking about some small quantity of methamphet­amine that was manufactur­ed in a pot in somebody’s RV,” Benjamin C. Glassman, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, said during Tuesday’s news con-

ference at Dayton’s Federal Building.

“We are talking about literally hundreds of pounds of methamphet­amine that is being sent by a Mexican drug traffickin­g organizati­on to exploit the addiction of people here in Ohio and the surroundin­g region.”

The latest seizure in the year-lo ng inve s tigation included the 140 pounds of meth, nearly 15.5 pounds of fentanyl, nearly 4.5 pounds of heroin, more than $130,000 in cash and a Bersa 9mm pistol, according to Glassman and court documents.

Those indicted and in custody are Salvador Ramirez, aka “Listo,” 23 of West Chester, Tamara McQueen, 21 of Hamilton, Luis Roberto Diaz-Magana, 29 of Queretaro, Mexico, and Jesus “Jesse” Garcia, 49 of West Chester. Takeea Trammel, 41, of Dayton, has said she would turn herself in, according to authoritie­s.

Glassman said help is needed to find Joshua Leach, 34, and Brandi Loy, 34, both recently of Plain City. He said anyone with informatio­n can call the Dayton Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (DEA) office at 937-903-5860.

“We need the public’s assistance specifical­ly in order to apprehend the fugitives in this case,” Glassman said. “We also need the public’s assistance generally so that the public is aware of the threat that is posed by stimulant drugs like methamphet­amine, cocaine and other stimulants that are just as deadly as the opioid drugs that have been plaguing this region for quite some time.”

Glassman would not provide any details of the origin of the investigat­ion, the apprehensi­on of suspects or the assistance that the DEA received from the Middletown and Monroe police department­s, the Pike County and Warren County sheriff ’s offices, the Ohio State Highway Patrol and other agencies. He said the meth and the cash were seized in Ohio and the fentanyl was seized in Texas.

“The Salvador Ramirez drug traffickin­g organizati­on was based in the Dayton metropolit­an area and quickly expanded to the communitie­s in and around Columbus and Cincinnati,” said Mauricio Jimenez, Assistant Special Agent in Charge in the DEA’s Columbus District. “This is an ongoing, longterm investigat­ion that has resulted in 15 indictment­s, 12 arrests and, to date, seven conviction­s.”

Jimenez added that the Ramirez group is linked to a “Mexican transnatio­nal criminal organizati­on” and is associated with a high-ranking member of a “violent, internatio­nal gang.”

Glassman would not pinpoint the cartel, the gang affiliatio­n or how the investigat­ion began.

“It has involved a number of different seizures and court-authorized law enforcemen­t techniques including the execution of search warrants,” Glassman said. “We’re not prepared to allege that this organizati­on is responsibl­e for any deaths.

“Although I will say that I’ve given you figures for the huge quantities of drugs that have been seized as a result of this investigat­ion, and that’s nothing of the quantities of drugs that may have been produced had this organizati­on been allowed to continue.”

Ramirez was arraigned Tuesday morning and pleaded not guilty. McQueen’s arraignmen­t was delayed because her attorney said she didn’t receive a copy of the supersedin­g indictment.

Diaz-Magana and Garcia previously were arraigned June 29 by U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Michael Newman. Both pleaded not guilty. All four defendants in custody are being detained.

Glassman said stimulant epidemics typically pop up in areas with a heavily opioid-addicted population such as the Dayton area.

“A s you can see, law enforcemen­t is prepared to meet that threat,” he said. “And we’re doing through investigat­ions collaborat­ively with federal, state and local partners like the kind that we’re announcing (Tuesday).”

 ??  ?? U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio Benjamin Glassman (behind podium), Columbus District Drug Enforcemen­t Assistant Special Agent in Charge Mauricio Jimenez (left of Glassman) and other local and state law enforcemen­t officials announce the unsealing of a criminal indictment of seven more individual­s alleged to be in a large-scale methamphet­amine traffickin­g organizati­on.
U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio Benjamin Glassman (behind podium), Columbus District Drug Enforcemen­t Assistant Special Agent in Charge Mauricio Jimenez (left of Glassman) and other local and state law enforcemen­t officials announce the unsealing of a criminal indictment of seven more individual­s alleged to be in a large-scale methamphet­amine traffickin­g organizati­on.
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 ??  ?? Meth was seized from what federal officials said was a drug-dealing organizati­on working in southwest Ohio.
Meth was seized from what federal officials said was a drug-dealing organizati­on working in southwest Ohio.

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