Defendants used Cash from China to Purchase and Operate
Marijuana Grow Houses – Set up Shipping Company to Move Thousands of Pounds of
Black Market Marijuana to East Coast
Three members
of an international drug trafficking organization were sentenced today in U.S.
District Court in Seattle to prison terms ranging from 24-32 months for
distributing more than a thousand kilograms of illegal marijuana, announced
U.S. Attorney Brian T. Moran. The
defendants pleaded guilty in March 2019, admitting in their plea agreements
that they used money from conspirators in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC)
to purchase homes in the Puget Sound area that they used for marijuana
production. QIFENG LI, 41, was sentenced
to 32 months in prison and 4 years of supervised release, his wife XIAMIN
HUANG, 39, was sentenced to two years in prison and two years of supervised
release, and brother QIWEI LI, 45, was sentenced to 30 months in prison. Of the three, QIWEI LI is the only one who is
not a U.S. Citizen and faces deportation following his prison term. At the sentencing hearing U.S. District Judge
John C. Coughenour said this was “an extensive and sophisticated grow operation
over a multi-year period.”
“Foreign
money is increasingly used to create networks of illegal and unsafe grow
houses, blighting our neighborhoods and defeating the closely regulated
marijuana marketplace the State of Washington pledged to create,” said U.S.
Attorney Brian T. Moran. “These illegal
grow houses are toxic from chemicals, pose a fire risk from jury-rigged wiring,
and are targeted for violent strong-armed robberies. These defendants are forfeiting more than $1
million in cash and properties, but they are fortunate they escaped being shot
or killed at one of their illegal grows.”
According to
the facts admitted in the plea agreement, between July 2015 and May 2018, the
conspirators purchased homes in Burien, Kent, Seattle and Tukwila, which they
used exclusively for marijuana production.
More than $598,000 was wired to the conspirators from China to fund the
purchases. The defendants shipped more
than 1,000 kilograms of marijuana to the New York City area, via FedEx, UPS,
the U.S. Postal Service and a private freight forwarder. Ultimately, in an effort to streamline
distribution, the conspirators established a shipping company, Pony Movers,
LLC, to transport their marijuana from Western Washington to a warehouse in
Little Ferry, New Jersey. The defendants
then deposited the profits from the marijuana enterprise into their bank
accounts in amounts less than $10,000 to avoid financial reporting
requirements.
QIFENG LI
and XIAMIN HUANG are U.S. citizens.
QIWEI LI is a Lawful Permanent Resident who likely will face deportation
following his prison term.
This was an
Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation, providing
supplemental federal funding to the federal and state agencies involved.
The
Investigation was led by DEA and Homeland Security Investigation (HSI). Significant investigative assistance was also
provided by the Seattle Police Department and FBI.
The case is
being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney Joe Silvio and
Assistant United States Attorney Marie Dalton.
Mr. Silvio is an attorney with Homeland Security Investigations,
specially designated to prosecute cases in federal court.
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