Defendant is the Third Person Sentenced in Operation “To The
Dirt”
LITTLE ROCK—A Dover man was sentenced Monday for
distribution of methamphetamine in connection with white supremacist groups in
the Pope County area. Joseph Pridmore, 34, of Dardanelle, was sentenced to 150
months in federal prison by United States District Judge Brian S. Miller. Cody
Hiland, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, announced
today’s sentencing.
Judge Miller also sentenced Pridmore, who pleaded guilty in
October 2019 to distribution of
methamphetamine actual, to five years of supervised release following his term
of imprisonment.
In 2016, local and federal agencies initiated a joint
investigation to identify, infiltrate, and dismantle drug trafficking
organizations in Russellville. Agents identified multiple individuals who were
trafficking methamphetamine in the Pope County area. The investigation revealed
that Pridmore obtained multi-ounce quantities of methamphetamine from sources
in Russellville and distributed the meth in ounces or grams to various individuals
in the area.
Pridmore is a self-professed member of White Aryan
Resistance, a white supremacist group with similar core beliefs and rank
structure as the New Aryan Empire (NAE), a white supremacist organization that
began as a prison gang. According to charging documents in the case, “it is not
uncommon for the two groups to collaborate and comingle to further their
criminal objectives, including narcotics distribution.”
“Today’s lengthy sentence in Operation ‘To The Dirt’ is one
of many more to come,” said Cody Hiland, United States Attorney for the Eastern
District of Arkansas. “When members of these violent white supremacist
organizations use their warped ideology to facilitate drug trafficking, it will
result in a significant prison term. We will continue to investigate and
prosecute methamphetamine distribution in this as well as other corrupt
organizations.”
Pridmore was charged on October 3, 2017, in a federal
indictment that charged 44 people from the Pope County area with numerous gun and
drug violations. The case is named “To The Dirt,” a reference to the NAE slogan
referring to the rule that members must remain in the NAE until they die.
After Daniel Adame of Dardanelle became the first defendant
to plead guilty in “To The Dirt,” a federal grand jury returned a superseding
indictment on February 5, 2019, which named 11 additional defendants and added
charges for the defendants’ involvement in acts involving attempted murder,
kidnapping, maiming, and conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. Adame was
sentenced in May 2019 to 262 months in prison, Britanny Conner was Sentenced in
October 2019 to 120 months in prison, and Pridmore is the third defendant to be
sentenced in the case.
The investigation included the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Firearms, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, as well as the Pope County Sheriff’s Office and the Russellville
Police Department.
The year 2020 marks the 150th anniversary of the Department
of Justice. Learn more about the history of our agency at
www.Justice.gov/Celebrating150Years.
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