INDIANAPOLIS — Eleven people have been sentenced to federal prison after pleading guilty to their involvement in drug trafficking, according to The Department of Justice.
Federal agents had started investigating several people for their suspected involvement in drug trafficking in the fall of 2019 in the Indianapolis area. As the investigation continued, the investigators discovered that methamphetamine was being transported from Muncie to Vans Auto Repair, located in Indianapolis, for distribution.
At the end of the investigation, 11 people were charged in three different indictments for multiple drug trafficking charges.
According to the DOJ, on August 3, 2020, 16 search warrants and federal arrest warrants were executed by federal agents and Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers in the Indianapolis area.
Due to those warrants, 31 illegally possessed firearms, 4½ pounds of methamphetamine; ½ kilogram of cocaine; 1 kilogram of fentanyl, and approximately $272,000 in cash drug trafficking proceeds were seized. All of the defendants pleaded guilty and were sentenced.
“Traffickers of methamphetamine and fentanyl further the devastating cycle of substance abuse disorder to satisfy their own greed,” U.S. Attorney Zachary A. Myers said. “These prosecutions and sentences demonstrate that we will work tirelessly with our federal and local law enforcement partners to hold the traffickers of these dangerous and deadly drugs accountable for the pain they inflict on our communities.”
-
Monroe County cancels homeless camp eviction on county-owned land
Monroe County hoped to remove a homeless community between Switchyard Park and RCA Community Park before Christmas. Instead, the tents will remain for the foreseeable future.
Damien Center urges lawmakers to extend Indiana needle exchange programs
Each year, the Damien Center says they have about 5,000 visits from people in need of clean needles.
Brownsburg APC to vote on Hawks Landing subdivision amid resident concerns
Proposed development would bring more than 100 homes near Green Street and Acre Lane, with neighbors raising concerns about traffic and its proximity to Oinking Acres.
Report ranks Indiana worst in the country for roads
A new survey of truck drivers and owner-operators ranks Indiana as having the worst roads in the country.