ANCHORAGE—U.S. Attorney Karen L.
Loeffler announced that on September 14, 2012, Daniel Isaac Meza, 37, was
sentenced to 210 months in prison for his leading role in a conspiracy to
distribute more than five kilograms of cocaine, one kilogram of heroin, more
than 50 grams of actual methamphetamine, and a quantity of oxycodone. U.S.
District Court Judge Timothy M. Burgess imposed the sentence, which also
included a $13,500 fine.
In his prior guilty plea, Meza admitted
to supplying illegal drugs to multiple members of the trafficking organization,
who then redistributed to lower-level dealers and drug users. Meza was the last
of 11 charged defendants to be convicted of involvement in the expansive drug
trafficking network, whose members were responsible for trafficking large
amounts of illegal narcotics in Alaska and laundering the proceeds by wire
transfer to El Salvador, Mexico, and Colombia. Eight defendants have now been
indicted and convicted of direct participation in Meza’s conspiracy, which was
charged along with a related conspiracy involving Patrick Sherman, a former
corrections officer at Anchorage Correctional Complex. Sherman was convicted in
November 2010, of cooperating with co-conspirator Brandi Barnes to distribute
marijuana, cocaine, and heroin, along with syringes, in Anchorage Correctional
Complex. Barnes pled guilty to her role in both related conspiracies on March
2, 2012. Two defendants—James McAnulty and Robyn Ray—were not directly charged
in the conspiracy but have been convicted, respectively, of distributing
cocaine on behalf of conspiracy member Billy Fuller and laundering more than
$40,000 in drug proceeds for Meza. Edwin Giovanni Enriquez, Billy Walter
Fuller, Michael George Raab, Debbie Beisinaiz, and Cori Jean Hillar, were also
convicted for their roles in the conspiracy.
Additionally, Meza pled guilty to one
count of international money laundering relating to drug trafficking. The
indictment alleged that he sent drug proceeds to Mexico, Colombia, and El
Salvador on 21 occasions. At this point, all of the defendants have been
sentenced for their roles in the conspiracy.
According to information presented to
the court at sentencing, Meza imported cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and
oxycontin into Alaska, where these substances were distributed by a network of
associates that included all of the other conspirators. Court documents alleged
that Meza used hollowed-out Coleman coolers to smuggle narcotics into Alaska,
and then transported money out of Alaska by wire transfer or by physical
transportation of bulk currency concealed in electronic equipment. Court
documents alleged that over 100 grams of heroin were found in Meza’s freezer in
July of 2010, and that this heroin was only part of more than a kilogram of
heroin that Meza distributed at an earlier time. Law enforcement exposed Meza’s
organization by utilizing several court ordered telephone wiretaps.
In imposing sentence, Judge Burgess
noted the seriousness and breadth of the crime, finding that Meza was an
organizer and leader of the conspiracy, and found that Meza committed the
offense as part of a pattern of criminal conduct engaged in as a livelihood.
The case was the result of an
investigation conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration, Anchorage
District Office, and the Alaska State Troopers Mat-Su Narcotics Unit; the
investigation was supported by numerous agencies, including the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, Anchorage Police Department, Internal Revenue
Service-Criminal Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations, Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, and the Anchorage Airport Police.
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