Security News: Operation Hard Pressed Results in Charges Against Seven Defendants for Selling Fentanyl, Cocaine and Fake Xanax Pills

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Seven suspects were arrested Tuesday in Tulsa for allegedly taking part in a drug trafficking organization operating in the Tulsa metro area that distributed counterfeit Xanax pills, cocaine, and fentanyl.

“The U.S. Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners are committed to dismantling and holding accountable criminal organizations that endanger communities across Oklahoma,” said U.S. Attorney Clint Johnson. “The seven arrests and searches at 10 locations were the result of a meticulous investigation into defendant Tristan Barlow’s drug trafficking organization. Barlow and six coconspirators are alleged to have distributed deadly fentanyl, cocaine and thousands of counterfeit Xanax pills in the Northern District of Oklahoma and elsewhere. My office will seek to hold these alleged drug traffickers accountable in a federal court.”

Agents and task force officers conducted searches on multiple residences, stash houses, a storage unit, and two parcels of rural land. During the searches, law enforcement located a tent set up at a residence with a pill press and ventilation system, thousands of pills, cash, and nineteen firearms, which included three AR-15 rifles, an AK-47, an Uzi machine gun, and handguns.

A Criminal Complaint and affidavit filed late Wednesday in federal court alleged that Barlow, 30, led the criminal operation and that members included Zachary Caughron, 30; Natalie Foutch, 20; Richard Markham, 35; Kolby Milford, 27; Christopher Ruff, 30; and Jacob Shoate, 21. Defendants were charged with drug conspiracy and with possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.

According to the documents, the drug trafficking organization imported raw clonazolam powder from Europe that was pressed into hundreds of thousands of counterfeit Xanax pills. Investigators estimate that Barlow provided some of his distributors between 10,000 and 20,000 pills per week and others between 20,000 and 40,000 per week for sale within the Northern District of Oklahoma and elsewhere. The drug trafficking organization further received fentanyl and cocaine from a source of supply in Mexico.

In 2022, law enforcement conducted multiple controlled buys of the counterfeit Xanax pills, cocaine and fentanyl. The counterfeit pills were stamped with GG249 and appeared to be Xanax but were later tested in a laboratory and found to contain clonazolam as well as methamphetamine.

“The successful arrests of numerous alleged members of this sophisticated drug trafficking organization, responsible for the distribution of deadly quantities of various drugs, to include cocaine and fentanyl, throughout our neighborhoods, is one step closer to a safer Oklahoma,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Eduardo A. Chávez, who oversees operations in the State.  “Our special agents, intelligence analysts, and task force officers spent countless hours, along with many of our law enforcement partners, ensuring justice is served for those who profit from illicit drug trafficking.”

The arrests and searches were conducted as part of Operation Hard Pressed, an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force investigation led by the Drug Enforcement Administration and Assistant U.S. Attorney Ben Tonkin. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

The Drug Enforcement Administration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, Tulsa Police Department, and Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office are the investigative agencies.

This matter will proceed in U.S. District Court in Tulsa, where the Complaint is currently pending. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. A Complaint is a temporary charge alleging a violation of law. For the case to proceed to trial, the United States must present the charge to a federal Grand Jury within 30 days. Once a Grand Jury returns an Indictment, a defendant has a right to a jury trial at which the United States would have the burden of proving the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Security News: Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta Delivers Remarks at the UNC School of Law

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Thank you, Ted [Shaw], for that warm introduction, but more for your leadership, mentorship, support, and friendship most of all. You are anchoring civil rights here at UNC. I also want to thank Dean Brinkley, Associate Dean Podger Smith, UNC School of Law, and the UNC Community for inviting me here today and organizing this event. I am delighted to have the chance to speak with you all today, and Mary-Rose [Papandrea], I look forward to our conversation.

I am honored to be here at UNC to celebrate Constitution Day – a fitting time to discuss how we can honor civil rights and commit to equal justice under the law every day. Equal Justice is not a self-executing proposition – it takes work of all of us to make it real.

The preamble to the Constitution expressly states that its purpose is to establish justice. And it is the responsibility of all of us as members of the legal community to bring that ideal to life – to turn the values we profess into real protections for real people in real communities. And it’s not easy. As law students, now is the time for you to start thinking about how you will fulfill that responsibility.

I join you on behalf of the Department of Justice, the only federal government agency whose name is a value. At its founding, following the Civil War, the department’s priority was to enforce the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments and to protect Black Americans seeking to exercise their right to vote from the violence of the Ku Klux Klan. Today, the department’s commitment to protecting civil rights and ensuring equal justice for all remains unchanged. And that still very much includes the right to vote, which is so foundational to our democracy. We are litigating across the country right now to protect the right to vote. We sued Texas, challenging redistricting plans that deny Black and Latino voters an equal opportunity to participate in the voting process and elect representatives of their choice. We also challenged a Texas law that impairs the rights of Black and Latino voters to vote absentee and, when they vote in person, to receive help in the voting booth. And we sued to stop a law in Arizona that imposes numerous unlawful restrictions on voter registration. These are a handful of examples of the critical work we are doing to protect the constitutionally guaranteed voting rights of Americans across the country, rights that are quite under peril at this time.

As the Attorney General has made clear, while the Civil Rights Division is tasked with enforcing civil rights laws, it is the responsibility of the entire department to protect civil rights. To take a few examples:

  1. We are using all of the department’s tools to fight hate crimes – including prosecutions, victim-centered services, community mediation and reconciliation programs, and grants to support community-based responses to hate – to ensure people can live free from exploitation and violence regardless of their race, religion, disability, how they identify, or who they love.
  2. As law students, antitrust may seem like a hyper-technical area of law. But at its core, antitrust is about economic justice. Our Antitrust Division is fighting every day for principles like fair competition and preventing the abuse of market power to make sure we have an economy that works for everyone, to help ensure people get higher quality products, earn fair wages, and pay fair prices for essentials like health insurance, airline tickets, and food for their families.
  3. And we have re-established under this Attorney General the department’s Office for Access to Justice, which is working to stop unlawful evictions, expand resources for reentry for those returning home from incarceration, increase language access, and combat the criminalization of poverty.

There is more to say about these efforts and others, and I hope to address them with you during the fireside chat.

For now, I want to focus on three areas where we are working across the department to protect and advance civil rights: our work in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision; our renewed commitment to environmental justice; and our efforts to advance constitutional policing and build police-community trust.

It has been almost three months since the Supreme Court took away the Constitutional right to abortion. Dobbs dealt a devastating blow, preventing women from making important decisions about our bodies, our health, and our lives. That decision, and state actions that follow, are having a disproportionate impact on people of color, people with limited financial means, and other vulnerable populations.

That’s why we are taking action. I chair the Justice Department’s newly established Reproductive Rights Task Force, which is coordinating efforts across the department including by challenging states in court that attempt to contravene federal laws protecting reproductive healthcare access. Last month, we sued Idaho for its near-total ban on abortion, arguing that its law violates the requirement under federal law that medical professionals provide necessary stabilizing medical treatment for emergency medical conditions. We won a preliminary injunction, ensuring right now that women can access the emergency treatment and services they need. 

We are working outside the courtroom, too.  We are expanding access to justice in states that have criminalized patients, providers and third parties seeking to provide reproductive healthcare access. We are preparing trainings, including on the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, which prohibits anyone from obstructing access to reproductive health services through violence, threats of violence, or property damage. We are providing technical assistance to Congress in connection with draft legislation. In short, we are trying to do everything we can with the levers that we have to ensure access to reproductive services.  

Another area where we are working across the department is environmental justice. Although violations of our environmental laws can occur anywhere, our indigenous communities, communities of color, and low-income communities often endure the greatest harm. It is an honor to be here in in North Carolina during the 40th anniversary of the Warren County protests, which many consider to be the beginning of the environmental justice movement. In 1982, when the state of North Carolina dumped truckloads of toxic chemicals in a small, predominantly Black and low-income neighborhood, its residents stood up — they marched and protested. And while they did not win the ultimate battle against the landfill, their actions shed light on environmental justice issues across the country, and started the movement we are proud to be part of today.  

This past spring, I announced the department’s Comprehensive Environmental Justice Enforcement Strategy, which will ensure that components across the Justice Department, including all 94 of our U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, are identifying and addressing environmental justice concerns. The Attorney General also created our first-ever Office of Environmental Justice to serve as the central hub for these efforts, prioritizing meaningful engagement with the communities most affected by environmental injustice. We opened one such investigation in Houston, in which we will examine whether the city responds to requests for municipal services, including complaints about illegal dumping, in a manner that discriminates against Black and Latino Houston residents, in violation of federal civil rights laws.  

Finally, I want to highlight the department’s commitment to constitutional policing. We charged four current and former Louisville Metro Police Department officers with federal crimes related to Breonna Taylor’s tragic death. One of the former officers has pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit two federal crimes. The department also secured a conviction against the officer who murdered George Floyd and the three officers that stood by and failed to intervene — all of whom violated Mr. Floyd’s constitutional rights. Those convictions are important in and of themselves, but the convictions for failing to intervene or render medical aid also impact training on such issues in police departments nationwide.

Criminal prosecutions alone, however, do not remedy systemic issues communities are facing across the country. The department also uses pattern or practice investigations, which can lead to consent decrees and long-term change. But in a nation of 18,000 police departments, we cannot enforce our way to constitutional policing. That is why we must use a variety of tools.

Through our relaunched Collaborative Reform Initiative, the department provides three levels of highly tailored technical assistance to law enforcement agencies that request it. One example came following the horrific school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, when Uvalde’s mayor reached out to the department for assistance. We put together a team of experts to conduct an after-action review of law enforcement activity that tragic day, to identify lessons learned and help provide a roadmap for stronger community safety and engagement going forward. And last spring, I announced the Law Enforcement Knowledge Lab, a one-stop shop where communities and police departments can go online and access resources, research, and training modules on promising practices in policing — drawn from our years of experience with consent decrees and other training and technical assistance. Through the Knowledge Lab, police departments can also access direct assistance from subject matter experts on a variety of key topics to help advance constitutional policing in their organizations. 

The department is committed to protecting democracy for all Americans and to our original mission of protecting fundamental rights like voting rights. We continue to further this mission by recognizing the many ways we can advance civil rights, but in the face of today’s challenges to our democracy, we must stay focused, hopeful, and work to make a real difference. It matters to have a Justice Department that does all it can to live up to equal justice under law. And it matters to have law students like all of you rolling up your sleeves and striving toward equal justice too — in your classes, in clinics and internships, and someday soon, outside in the world.              

Thank you, and I look forward to continuing this conversation and your questions.

Security News: Department of Justice and Department of Defense Support Federal Communications Commission Inquiry into Internet Security

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Today, the Justice Department’s National Security Division and the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) filed a submission with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in support of action to improve the security of internet routing.

This submission was filed in connection with an FCC Notice of Inquiry on Secure Internet Routing launched in February and offered in support of the comment previously submitted by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

“We applaud the FCC’s decision to launch this inquiry on this important issue,” said Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice Department’s National Security Division. “We appreciate the opportunity to provide our input on how to address vulnerabilities threatening the security of internet routing.”

According to the filing, known vulnerabilities in the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), which governs internet traffic routing, continue to put U.S. person and commercial data and communications at risk of theft, espionage and sabotage by foreign adversaries. Though BGP enables network providers to share information about traffic routing so that they can identify the “best” routes for traffic to reach its destination, it does not include any security features. Accordingly, the Justice Department and DOD recommended today that the FCC manage BGP-associated vulnerabilities through a combination of technical security standards and increased transparency.

As an example, BGP vulnerabilities facilitated China Telecom America’s ability to misroute U.S. internet traffic to the People’s Republic of China (PRC), according to Executive Branch recommendations previously filed with the FCC. As an entity under the control of the PRC government, China Telecom’s exploitation of BGP vulnerabilities provided a foreign adversary of the United States with opportunities to disrupt, capture, examine and alter U.S. traffic.

The nation’s longstanding reliance upon voluntary measures to secure sensitive U.S. data may no longer be sufficient to address this vulnerability. As a result, the Justice Department and DOD support FCC’s initiation of a process to better secure BGP, including through technical security and transparency measures that will help safeguard the data and communications that are so central to U.S. national security interests.

Security News: 26-Year-Old Sentenced to 19 Years in Federal Prison for Business Robberies

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Memphis, TN – Malik Williams, 26, has been sentencedto 228 months in federal prison for committing 
multiple business robberies.  Joseph C. Murphy, Jr., United States Attorney announced the sentence 
today.

According to court documents and information in the public record, on June 28, 2019, Malik 
Williams, Decardo Moore, and Joshua Beason robbed multiple Memphis-area gas stations. At 
approximately 2 a.m., Williams, Moore, and Beason went to the Murphy Express on Summer Avenue. 
Williams and Beason put a handgun to the side of a store clerk, forced him inside the store, and 
threatened the lives of both store clerks. They took money from the register and fled. Moore served 
as the getaway driver.

Approximately thirty minutes later, Williams and Beason robbed the Exxon on Summer Avenue. They 
brandished firearms and removed the cash drawer before they fled the scene. Moore served as the 
getaway driver. Minutes later, the group participated in a home invasion on the 2000 block of West 
Barbara Circle where a resident, Williams and Moore were shot. All three survived. Charges for the 
home invasion are pending for all three defendants before the State of Tennessee.

Williams went to trial in June 2022 and was found guilty of both business robberies and the use of 
firearms during the robberies.

On September 9, 2022, United States District Judge Sheryl H. Lipman sentenced Williams to 228 
months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. This sentence will be 
consecutive to any sentence obtained by the State of Tennessee for
the pending home invasion charges.

On October 25, 2021, Moore pled guilty to four counts of robbery and four counts of brandishing a 
firearm in relation to a crime of violence. U.S. District Judge Mark S. Norris sentenced Moore to 
life in federal prison plus 21 years’ incarceration.

On May 14, 2021, Joshua Beason was sentenced to 293 months in federal prison. There is no parole in 
the federal system.

This case was investigated by the FBI’s Safe Streets Task Force.

Assistant United States Attorney Greg Wagner prosecuted this case on behalf of the government.

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Security News: Jackson Man Pleads Guilty to Possession of a Firearm by a Convicted Felon and Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Distribute

Source: United States Department of Justice News

JACKSON, MS – A Jackson man pleaded guilty today to Possession of a Firearm by a Convicted Felon and Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Distribute.

According to court documents, Gregory L. Randle, 30, on December 3, 2021, fled from a traffic safety checkpoint resulting in a pursuit by the Mississippi Highway Patrol. Law enforcement officers apprehended Randle after a short chase and discovered a firearm and several pounds of marijuana in his vehicle. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives continued the investigation into the firearm and the marijuana.

Randle plead guilty to a violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 922(g)(1) which criminalizes the possession of firearms by convicted felons. Randle also plead guilty to a violation of Title 21, United States Code, Section 841(a)(1) which criminalizes the possession of controlled substances, including marijuana, with the intent to distribute. He is scheduled to be sentenced December 13, 2022, and faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison for the firearm charge and a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison for the controlled substances charge. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

U.S. Attorney Darren J. LaMarca of the Southern District of Mississippi; and Special Agent in Charge Kurt H. Thielhorn of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives made the announcement.

The Mississippi Highway Patrol and the ATF investigated the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles W. Kirkham is prosecuting the case.

This case is being prosecuted as part of the joint federal, state, and local Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) Program, the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime reduction efforts. PSN is an evidence-based program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry programs for lasting reductions in crime.