According to court documents, Savongsy and his co-defendants—Phousangkhy Phanthadeth, aka Phou, 38; Manop Souksavath, 39, both of Fresno; Ernson Merisier, 27, of Holbrook, Mass.; Marquis Allen Meca, 27; and Ruddys A. Pimentel, 29, both of Roslindale, Mass.—were involved in the interstate shipment and distribution of marijuana grown in agricultural fields in Fresno County. The fields were posted with medicinal marijuana recommendations from medical doctors, but Savongsy, Phanthadeth, and Souksavath conspired to ship and did ship the marijuana to Merisier, Meca, and Pimentel in the Boston area, where the drug was sold for about $3,000 per pound, about three times what it sells for in California. The State of Massachusetts has not legalized marijuana for medicinal purposes.
According to court documents, on November 4, 2010, Phanthadeth and Souksavath were arrested in Utah following a traffic stop of their vehicle, which contained about 184 pounds of marijuana. Law enforcement officials then supervised the delivery of the marijuana to Merisier, Meca, and Pimentel in Roslindale, Mass., who paid about $66,000 in cash as partial payment for the total price—$570,400—of the marijuana. Law enforcement officers then executed multiple search warrants in locations in Fresno, Cedar City, Utah, and Roslindale, Mass., resulting in the seizure of approximately 4,620 live marijuana plants, approximately 3,563 pounds of processed marijuana, 11 firearms, a 2006 Dodge Charger, and $113,151 in cash.
Savongsy is the last defendant to be sentenced in this case. Phanthadeth was sentenced to five years in prison, Merisier and Pimentel were sentenced to two and a half years in prison, and Meca was sentenced to two years in prison.
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