Las Vegas Review-Journal

Local gets 8 years for dealing opioids

300 pounds of pills were to get Hello Kitty imprints

- By Brett Clarkson

A Las Vegas man who once fatally shot an armed robber was sentenced to eight years in prison for distributi­ng opioid painkiller­s across the United States, federal prosecutor­s announced Monday.

Christophe­r S. Housley, 51, was sentenced Friday in Las Vegas federal court after he pleaded guilty to one count of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance (tapentadol) and 20 money laundering charges, according to prosecutor­s and court records.

“In total, law enforcemen­t seized nearly 300,000 tapentadol pills weighing more than 300 pounds,” the U.S. attorney’s office for the District of Nevada said in a news release. Tapendatol is an opioid.

Prosecutor­s also said Housley and a co-conspirato­r “obtained a large industrial pill press” in July 2021 and that in October 2021 Housley “sought to obtain a Hello Kitty die used to press pills with that logo.”

Warrant reveals drug storage

Housley laundered the drug sale money using shell companies, prosecutor­s said.

In May 2022, law enforcemen­t executed a search warrant at a storage unit rented by Housley using a fake name, prosecutor­s said. The storage unit contained tapentadol, alprazolam, also known by the brand name Xanax, and other controlled substances.

According to court records, Housley had been facing a maximum potential sentence of 420 years in federal prison in connection with all the charges to which he had pleaded guilty.

In a separate incident years before his current legal ordeal, Housley shot armed robber Douglas Shaughness­y, 30, on Jan. 13, 2011, outside a southwest Las Vegas bar where Housley had been working as a bartender, Housley’s attorney, Jess Marchese, confirmed.

“That was him,” Marchese said. According to Las Vegas Review-journal archives, the Metropolit­an Police Department said that Housley followed Shaughness­y out of The Lodge at 5790 S. Fort Apache Road to record Shaughness­y’s license plate after a masked and pistol-wielding Shaughness­y had demanded money and left with $337.

Housley, who had a concealed weapons permit, drew his handgun and told Shaughness­y to “drop it.” Shaughness­y froze but raised his arm, resulting in Housley fearing he would be killed, Housley told police.

Metro police said video surveillan­ce confirmed Housley’s version of events.

Housley, who fired multiple shots, hitting Shaughness­y four times, was not charged in the incident.

“I’m stupid, I robbed the place and got shot,” a wounded Shaughness­y told a responding officer, the Review-journal reported, citing an arrest report.

Shaughness­y died six days later, on Jan. 18.

‘Fair sentence’

Housley’s sentence in the opioid case, handed down by U.S. District Judge Andrew P. Gordon, also includes three years of supervised release after he serves his prison term.

“I think it was a fair sentence,” Marchese said Monday. “I thought that Judge Gordon took all the factors into account.”

Marchese pointed out that Housley has always worked, didn’t have a criminal history, and is currently raising his own biological son as a single dad while also being instrument­al in a nonbiologi­cal son’s life.

The Las Vegas-based attorney said he didn’t anticipate filing an appeal and said that Housley, who has been ordered to surrender to federal custody by noon on June 14, wants to get this chapter of his life over with.

“He wants to move on,” Marchese said.

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