The Oklahoman

FBI agent cracks Oklahoma-based drug ring’s coded language

- Josh Dulaney

In breaking up a drug trafficking ring, a local FBI agent had to figure out why the group always talked about baseball caps, truck parts and beans.

The two-year investigat­ion culminated this month when an Oklahoma City federal judge sentenced Antonio Ortiz Herrera, 46, of Edmond, to 22 years in federal prison for his role in a drug trafficking organizati­on that is responsibl­e for distributi­ng hundreds of kilograms of methamphet­amine and cocaine throughout the United States.

Herrera was the last of nine people to be sentenced in the case, with the group collective­ly ordered to serve more than 91 years in federal prison.

He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphet­amine.

Prosecutor­s said Herrera and his group had ties to Mexico, the starting point of shipments of methamphet­amine and cocaine into both Texas and Oklahoma.

Millions of dollars were made through the illegal drug operation, most of which went back to Mexico through bulk cash smuggling.

A key part of cracking the case was decoding the evolving language of drug dealers.

Using two confidential informants, surveillan­ce, recorded phone calls and court-ordered wiretaps, the Oklahoma City-based FBI agent quickly developed a new dialect, according to court documents.

Baseball caps? That was the code for camper shells on pickups.

Investigat­ors said the traffickers sealed drugs and cash inside the interior roofs of the camper shells as they navigated back and forth from Mexico and across the United States.

One traffic stop led to the discovery of 49 square, kilogram-size, outlines on the interior roof of the camper shell.

It turned out to be cocaine.

A search warrant executed on one pickup led to the discovery of roughly $600,000 in cash “arranged neatly within the roof of the camper shell,” the FBI agent wrote in an affidavit. Then there were truck parts. Herrera, not knowing he was talking to a confidential informant who received $500 from the FBI for cooperatin­g, explained that code words including “two truck parts” should be used for 2 ounces of drugs while making a purchase.

Ortiz was second in command to Victoriano Neri Hernandez, who was sentenced to 24 years in federal prison for drug conspiracy and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.

During one phone call intercepte­d by the FBI, Neri asked Herrera, “How the beans turned out.”

In a text message to Herrera, one associate wrote that he was “just about to turn on the pot for the beans.”

Beans was a code word for methamphet­amine.

Herrera explained to the confidential informant that the organizati­on received methamphet­amine in both liquid and powder form, both of which required drug traffickers to convert the methamphet­amine into the crystal form in which it is commonly sold, according to the affidavit.

The conversion process often is called “cooking” and involves a heat source applied to a cooking pot.

A search warrant executed at Herrera's residence led to the discovery of 10 individual­ly wrapped packages of what appeared to be cocaine, a 5-gallon bucket filled halfway with what appeared to be methamphet­amine, additional methamphet­amine that was spread out on a plastic tarp, and drug parapherna­lia that included scales and plastic bags.

The FBI Oklahoma City field office was joined in the investigat­ion by the Oklahoma City Police Department, with support from IRS Criminal Investigat­ion.

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