Guymon Daily Herald

Gang leader and spouse plead guilty to drug traffickin­g conspiracy

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OKLAHOMA CITY – Earlier this week, RAMON DOMINQUEZ, 46, currently incarcerat­ed in an Oklahoma prison, and STEPHANIE SOLIZ, 46, of Oklahoma City, pleaded guilty to a drug distributi­on conspiracy involving methamphet­amine and heroin, announced U.S. Attorney Timothy J. Downing.

According to court documents and public records, Dominquez was a member of the Southside Locos prison gang serving a life sentence in the Oklahoma Department of Correction­s for a previous conviction for First Degree Murder, in addition to sentences for other offenses. Leaders of the Southside Locos prison gang, including Dominquez, orchestrat

ed a large-scale drugtraffi­cking operation, primarily focused on distributi­on of methamphet­amine and heroin, using contraband cell phones from prison.

As a non-incarcerat­ed member of the conspiracy, Dominquez’s wife and co-defendant, Soliz, served as Dominquez’s de facto presence on the street. In addition to delivering drugs, Soliz collected proceeds from drug debts and sales, storing the money for future drug-traffickin­g and protecting the Southside Loco’s drugrelate­d assets.

On January 4, 2021, Dominquez pleaded guilty to his involvemen­t in the drug traffickin­g conspiracy. On January 6, 2021, Soliz also pleaded guilty to her involvemen­t in the drug traffickin­g conspiracy.

At sentencing, which is anticipate­d to take place in about 90 days, Dominquez faces a maximum penalty of life in a federal prison or a fine of up to $10,000,00, or both, in addition to a term of supervised release for five years. Soliz faces a maximum penalty of twenty years in federal prison or a fine of $1,000,000, or both, in addition to a term of supervised release for three years.

These charges are the result of a nearly twoyear investigat­ion by the Oklahoma City Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, the Oklahoma City Police Department, and the Oklahoma Department of Correction­s— Security Threats Intelligen­ce that ultimately led to the federal indictment­s of more than 40 defendants related to this drug traffickin­g enterprise. Thirty-four defendants have already pleaded guilty, and six defendants are still awaiting trial or plea hearings.

This prosecutio­n is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcemen­t Task Force (OCDETF) investigat­ion. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level drug trafficker­s, money launderers, gangs, and transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons that threaten the United States by using a prosecutor-led, intelligen­ce-driven, multiagenc­y approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcemen­t agencies against criminal networks.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jason Harley and David McCrary are prosecutin­g the case.

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