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UPDATE: All 11 defendants now sentenced in large Kalamazoo drug operation

After a four-day trial that began on December 4, 2020, Ricardo Mercado-Lozano and Stacey Parcell Gibson were convicted for their roles in the scheme. The organization was fronted by Battle Creek resident Andrew Bravo. Ricardo Mercado-Lozano was the last of the 11 to be sentenced. According to the Attorney’s Office, he will serve 24 years and four months in prison on conspiracy and distribution related charges. The organization distributed various drugs throughout the areas of Kalamazoo and Battle Creek between May 2017 and December 2019 when a bust occurred. Bravo later pleaded guilty and received a sentence of 264 months in prison last October. U.S. Attorney Andrew Birge said Mercado-Lozano would supply the substances to Bravo, who would later distribute them in those areas. Meanwhile, Stacey Parcell Gibson would receive drugs from Bravo for distribution in Battle Creek.

Odessa attorney sentenced to 2 years in federal prison

He is charged with being a drug user in possession of a firearm. Author: Mason Storrs Updated: 6:16 PM CDT July 14, 2021 MIDLAND, Texas In a press release Wednesday, the United States Attorney’s Office Western District of Texas announced that a federal judge sentenced Adrian Antonio Chavez, a practicing attorney in Odessa, to 24 months in prison for being a drug user in possession of a firearm. On top of the prison sentence, U.S. District Judge David Counts ordered Chavez to pay a $10,000 fine and be placed on supervised release for three years after his prison term is over.  According to the release, on April 15, 2021, Chavez entered a plea of guilty to one count of being a drug user in possession of a firearm before U.S. Magistrate Judge Ronald C. Griffin. 

Budget problems force agency to ask court to remove defendants from GPS monitors

Budget problems force agency to ask court to remove defendants from GPS monitors Budget problems force agency to ask court to remove defendants from GPS monitors The federal Pretrial Services Agency or PSA, which monitors defendants accused of crimes in D.C., has asked judges to take dozens of defendants off GPS monitoring devices, citing pandemic-related budget problems. WASHINGTON (FOX 5 DC) - The federal Pretrial Services Agency or PSA, which monitors defendants accused of crimes in D.C., has asked judges to take dozens of defendants off GPS monitoring devices, citing pandemic-related budget problems. FOX 5 discovered the request from PSA to remove 132 of 484 defendants on GPS devices in a court filing in an ongoing murder case from 2018.

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