Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Baja ring moved ‘thousands of pounds’ of drugs

San Diego mom gets a 6-year term for her role in an operation that brought in meth, fentanyl and more.

- By Alex Riggins Riggins writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A San Diego mother of three was sentenced this week to nearly six years in federal prison for her role in a Baja California­based drug traffickin­g ring operated by her brother that a judge estimated has likely brought “thousands of pounds of drugs” into the United States.

Her sentencing, and several other recent plea deals and sentencing­s, stems from a 14-count indictment handed down by a federal grand jury in May that charges 17 people with conspiring to distribute cocaine, fentanyl, heroin and methamphet­amine. The woman sentenced Monday, Angela Diana Guerrero, pleaded guilty to that charge and one of money laundering, while several other members of the alleged conspiracy faced charges of importing drugs or possession of drugs with intent to distribute.

As of Wednesday, the leader of the traffickin­g ring remained at large. Though his name remains sealed on the indictment, court records and courtroom testimony identified him as Israel Guerrero, the brother of the woman sentenced Monday. The name of another top defendant in the case also remains sealed, and that person remains at large.

Prosecutor­s said the indictment was the result of a federal task force investigat­ion dubbed “Operation Big Mouth” that resulted in the seizure of more than 340 pounds of methamphet­amine, 130 pounds of cocaine, 23 pounds of fentanyl and 6 pounds of heroin.

Federal agents also seized at least 13 firearms and $55,000 tied to the traffickin­g ring, according to court records.

U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel said Monday that those figures represente­d only “what we know” but that it’s likely the group had previously brought “thousands of pounds of drugs into the United States.”

Assistant U.S. Atty. Ryan Sausedo declined to say Wednesday whether the group had any ties to Mexican cartels but said it “clearly had substantia­l sources of supply in order to obtain the quantities [of drugs] they were bringing into the country.”

Sausedo said federal agents began investigat­ing the group in July 2021 and by May had made dozens of seizures of drugs, typically totaling 45 to 90 pounds. Sausedo told a judge during a detention hearing for one of the defendants that the group moved the drugs across the border in buckets purporting to contain constructi­on material such as drywall mud.

According to a sentencing memorandum for one of the defendants, those drugs were then moved to cities across California, as well as Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Nevada, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming.

An attorney for Angela Guerrero declined to comment on her client’s behalf due to portions of the case remaining sealed, but in sentencing documents and in court, the attorney said her client’s brother was the one who got her involved with the group.

Curiel sentenced another defendant, Elizabeth Allison Edelman, to 13 years in prison. Sausedo said Edelman received the longer sentence because she was not only smuggling drugs across the border but also running her own distributi­on network in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The highest-ranking defendant who has so far been taken into custody, Danny Lamar Miller-Kidd, is set to plead guilty next week. His role in the traffickin­g organizati­on remains unclear based on the records that are public in the case.

Court records show that Miller-Kidd, who lives in Nevada, was released in August after his initial arrest, was re-arrested in October and has been in custody since, after Las Vegas police stopped him on a traffic violation and searched his black Cadillac STS luxury sedan.

Inside the vehicle they allegedly found a shortbarre­led rifle with no serial number, high-capacity drum-style and other magazines, body armor and several gun parts typically used to make ghost guns.

 ?? U.S. Attorney’s Office ?? AMONG the drugs seized were 340 pounds of meth, 130 pounds of cocaine and 23 pounds of fentanyl.
U.S. Attorney’s Office AMONG the drugs seized were 340 pounds of meth, 130 pounds of cocaine and 23 pounds of fentanyl.

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