Tampa, Florida – U.S. District Judge Susan C. Bucklew has
sentenced Joe Harry Pegg (70, Ft. Lauderdale) to six years in federal prison
for conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruction of justice, and lying to
federal law enforcement officers. The court ordered him to serve this sentence
consecutive to his current 30-year term of incarceration that is set to expire
in 2020. Pegg was found guilty on August 17, 2017, following a jury trial.
According to court documents and evidence presented at
trial, during the 1980s and 1990s in south Florida, Pegg was a significant drug
trafficker who made millions of dollars by importing and distributing
marijuana. In 1982, he was convicted in the Eastern District of Louisiana for
conspiring to import and distribute nearly 650,000 pounds of marijuana. By the
early 1990s, Pegg was the head of a marijuana shipping organization that used
go-fast boats to transport large quantities of marijuana from the Caribbean to
the Dry Tortugas, off the coast of Florida. In 1994, Pegg was arrested by
federal agents after one of his vessels was intercepted off the coast of Fort
Myers with approximately 10,000 pounds of marijuana onboard. He was
subsequently convicted for a marijuana importation conspiracy and was sentenced
in 1996 to 30 years in federal prison.
In 2008, while incarcerated at the Coleman Federal
Correctional Complex, Pegg and his cellmate, Isidro Moreno, devised a scheme to
defraud the United States by attempting to secure Pegg’s early release from
prison using “third-party cooperation.” In some instances, an individual can
stand in for a cooperating defendant and provide assistance to law enforcement
and ultimately reduce the defendant’s original sentence. Pegg and Moreno knew,
however, that third-party cooperators couldn’t be paid by anyone, including Pegg
or anyone acting on his behalf.
After Moreno was released from prison, he enlisted Fernando
Morales to act as a third-party cooperator on Pegg’s behalf, whereby Morales
agreed to work with law enforcement to set up drug deals that would be credited
to Pegg to try and reduce his sentence. Morales agreed to be the third-party
cooperator, but he also wanted compensation for his efforts. Pegg, Moreno, and
other conspirators agreed to pay Morales $60,000, and to conceal the payments
from federal authorities.
After an arrest was made as a result of Morales’s
cooperation, authorities learned that Pegg, through his family members, had
made large cash payments to Moreno and Morales. Once Pegg learned that the
government was investigating his conduct, he directed Moreno and others
conspirators to lie to investigators and to conceal the payments from
government officials.
In addition to Pegg, two former federal agents were
convicted for their involvement in this scheme. Former DEA agent Samuel Murad,
the case agent who originally investigated Pegg’s marijuana trafficking case,
pleaded guilty to tax evasion and witness tampering and received a year in
prison for failing to report hundreds of thousands of dollars received from the
Pegg family, and for obstructing the FBI’s investigation. Former DEA agent
Robert Quinn was sentenced to three years’ probation for lying to federal
agents. Isidro Moreno and Fernando Morales were also convicted of conspiracy to
obstruct justice and lying to federal authorities, respectively.
These cases were investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and were prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Simon A.
Gaugush, Josephine W. Thomas, and Anita M. Cream.
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