Man was part of organization trafficking cocaine, marijuana
across the U.S.
SAVANNAH, GA: An
Atlanta man with an extensive felony record will spend more than six years in
federal prison for his role as a “mule” in a cross-country drug-trafficking
conspiracy.
United States District Court Judge William T. Moore Jr.
sentenced Devin Renard Dabney, 40, to 81 months in federal prison after Dabney
pled guilty to one count of possession of 500 grams or more of cocaine with
intent to distribute, announced Southern District of Georgia U.S. Attorney
Bobby L. Christine. Dabney also will
spend four years on supervised release after his incarceration. There is no
parole in the federal system.
One of 20 defendants in an extensive drug trafficking
organization, Dabney worked as a drug courier in the network that spanned from
California to Savannah. As outlined in court records and in various hearings,
marijuana sales were used to finance cocaine purchases, with cash proceeds
hidden in candy machines and shipped to hubs in Atlanta and California.
Co-conspirators in those areas shipped pounds of marijuana and kilograms of
cocaine to Savannah via U.S. Mail and in vehicles with hidden compartments.
As part of his plea, Dabney acknowledged that he was one of
the main cocaine “mules” of the conspiracy, frequently driving to locations in
the Atlanta area to pick up cocaine and then transporting those packages to
Savannah before returning to Atlanta with thousands of dollars in cash. During
the investigation, agents intercepted him on court-authorized wiretaps and
seized more than 1.5 kilograms of cocaine that was attached with magnets and
hidden in the rear fender wells of a vehicle he was driving from Atlanta to
Savannah.
Dabney was in phone contact with several co-conspirators,
including Karteau Jenkins, who is alleged to be the main source of supply of
cocaine for the drug trafficking organization. Jenkins is alleged to have
coordinated with Eugene “Poncho” Allen, who is alleged to be a ringleader of
the drug trafficking organization despite currently serving a life sentence for
murder in a Georgia state prison. Allen is alleged to have run his organization
using smuggled contraband phones.
Allegations and charges presume the defendants are innocent
unless and until proven guilty.
“Clint Eastwood visited Georgia this year to film ‘The
Mule,’ a movie based on a real-life drug courier. And just as the movie’s
slogan says, ‘Nobody runs forever,’” said U.S. Attorney Bobby L. Christine.
“Drug traffickers deliver destruction to our communities, and our office is
determined to flip the script on these merchants of misery and put them behind
bars.”
A federal grand jury
in August 2017 charged 20 defendants with drug trafficking offenses related to
this investigation; most of them have pled guilty. During this investigation,
agents seized eight firearms, more than 200 pounds of marijuana, multiple
kilograms of cocaine, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash.
“For a large-scale operation to be successful, it takes many
people who all work at different levels,” said Chatham-Savannah Counter
Narcotics Team Director Everett Ragan. “The same can be said regarding
large-scale drug operations. Oftentimes, people are recruited into drug
operation roles with a false promise to make easy money with limited liability.
This is an excellent example of how that is not true, and hopefully will serve
as a reminder that all members of a drug operation will be held
accountable."
This investigation was conducted by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), the Chatham County Narcotics Unit (CNT), the Savannah
Police Department, the Chatham and Effingham County Sheriffs’ Offices, the
United States Postal Inspector’s Office and the United States Marshals Service.
This case is being prosecuted as part of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Forces (OCDETF) program, which is the premier law enforcement unit whose
task is to dismantle multi-jurisdictional drug trafficking organizations. This
case is being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney/Assistant
District Attorney Noah Abrams, and Assistant United States Attorneys Greg
Gilluly and Frank Pennington.
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