MARTINSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA – Brandy Netz, of Martinsburg,
West Virginia, was sentenced today to 151 months incarceration for her role in
a cocaine, heroin, and fentanyl distribution operation, U.S. Attorney Bill
Powell announced.
Netz, age 35, pled guilty to one count of “Aiding and
Abetting Possession with Intent to Distribute Cocaine Hydrochloride” in
September 2019. Netz admitted to working with someone to distribute cocaine in
Berkeley County in January 2019.
These charges are the result of investigations supported by
the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) under the Attorney
General-led Synthetic Opioid Surge (SOS)/Special Operations Division (SOD)
Project Clean Sweep. This initiative
seeks to reduce the supply of synthetic opioids in “hot spot” areas previously
identified by the Attorney General of the United States, thereby reducing drug
overdoses and drug overdose deaths, and identify wholesale distribution
networks and sources of supply operating nationally and internationally.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara K. Omps-Botteicher, Special
Assistant U.S. Attorney C. Lydia Lehman, also with the Berkeley County
Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, and Assistant U.S Attorney Timothy D. Helman,
prosecuted the case on behalf of the government. The Federal Bureau of
Investigation; the West Virginia State Police; the Eastern Panhandle Drug &
Violent Crimes Task Force, a HIDTA-funded initiative; the Berkeley County
Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Office, the
Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, the Martinsburg Police Department, the
Charles Town Police Department, and the Ranson Police Department investigated.
This prosecution was brought as a part of the Department of
Justice’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) Co-located
Strike Forces Initiative, which provides for the establishment of permanent
multi-agency task force teams that work side-by-side in the same location. This co-located model enables agents from
different agencies to collaborate on intelligence-driven, multi-jurisdictional
operations against a continuum of priority targets and their affiliate illicit
financial networks. These prosecutor-led
co-located Strike Forces capitalize on the synergy created through the
long-term relationships that can be forged by agents, analysts, and prosecutors
who remain together over time, and they epitomize the model that has proven
most effective in combating organized crime.
Chief U.S. District Judge Gina M. Groh presided.
No comments:
Post a Comment