Spokane, Washington – Joseph H. Harrington, United States
Attorney for the Eastern District of Washington, announced that Marcos
Ramirez-Mercado, 46, of Yakima, Washington, and Michoacán, Mexico, was
sentenced today after having pleaded guilty on September 6, 2018, to a
conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine and the possession
of a firearm in furtherance of the conspiracy. Senior United States District
Judge William Fremming Nielsen sentenced Ramirez-Mercado to a 19-year term of
imprisonment, to be followed by a 10-year term of court supervision following
his release from prison. Upon his release from prison Ramirez-Mercado will
likely be removed from the United States to his native Mexico and not be
permitted to return.
According to information disclosed during the court
proceedings, Ramirez-Mercado was the leader and organizer of a years-long,
wide-ranging drug conspiracy in which whole kilograms of powder cocaine were
secreted in boxes of drywall compound and trafficked from Yakima into Spokane.
When law enforcement officers arrested Ramirez-Mercado in his car in June 2017,
they found three drywall boxes, each of which contained a kilogram of cocaine,
four boxes of .223 ammunition, and almost $2,000 in cash. In a secret room in
the basement of his house in Yakima, officers recovered almost $550,000 in
cash, eight firearms and ammunition, a kilogram of cocaine, and digital scales.
Prior to Ramirez-Mercado’s arrest, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation obtained a number of lawful wiretaps during the course of the
investigation, which began in 2014, and resulted in indictments being brought
against Ramirez-Mercado and 21 other defendants. The wiretaps revealed that
Ramirez-Mercado’s organization was trafficking huge amounts of cocaine into and
across Eastern Washington, in quantities as high as a kilogram every few weeks,
for years. Senior Judge Nielsen noted that the amount of cocaine for which
Ramirez-Mercado was actually responsible will never truly be known, but it was
certainly far much more than the three kilograms recovered from his car.
At Ramirez-Mercado’s sentencing hearing, several of his
family members addressed the Court, describing him as a good man who made a
mistake. Judge Nielsen, however, concluded that his years of trafficking large
quantities of narcotics were much more than a mistake, and that his conduct was
consistent with the lifestyle of a drug dealer. As Judge Nielsen noted,
Ramirez-Mercado caused his customers to become addicted to cocaine and then
held them captive to their addiction so he could continue to make a profit.
Joseph H. Harrington said, “The sentence imposed today
reflects the seriousness of Ramirez-Mercado’s grave criminal conduct. I commend
the FBI, the Spokane Sheriff’s Department, Spokane Police Department, and
Washington Department of Corrections, along with the United States Customs and
Border Protection and the Yakima Police Department Safe Streets Task Force. The
cooperation among federal, state, and local law enforcement officers was
remarkable. I salute their diligence and tenacity in pursuing the investigation
wherever it led.”
Special Agent in Charge Raymond P. Duda of the FBI’s Seattle
Field Office, agreed: “The lengthy sentence for Ramirez-Mercado, the leader of
this drug trafficking conspiracy, demonstrates the serious consequences for
individuals who compromise the safety and wellbeing of communities in Eastern
Washington by engaging in illegal drug activity. Those who seek to enrich
themselves at the expense of our communities should expect similar
consequences. The FBI is particularly thankful for our local, state, and
federal law enforcement partners, who were integral in this investigation.”
This case was part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Force (“OCDETF”) investigation. The OCDETF program provides supplemental
federal funding to the federal and state agencies involved in the investigation
of drug-related crimes. This OCDETF investigation was conducted by the FBI Safe
Streets Task Force, which includes law enforcement officers with the Spokane
Sheriff’s Department, Spokane Police Department, and Washington Department of
Corrections. United States Customs and Border Protection and the Yakima Police
Department also provided invaluable assistance throughout the investigation.
The case was prosecuted by David Herzog, an Assistant United States Attorneys
for the Eastern District of Washington.
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