GRAND
RAPIDS, MICHIGAN — U.S. Attorney Andrew Birge announced today a federal jury
convicted Richard Farmer, Sr., 44, of conspiring to distribute methamphetamine
and ecstasy after a four-day trial before the Honorable Robert J. Jonker, Chief
United States District Judge. Farmer faces up to thirty years in prison when he
is sentenced on October 9.
Farmer was
arrested in August 2018 during the multijurisdictional takedown of a
methamphetamine ring. Twenty-four defendants have been indicted in related
cases as part of the investigation, and sixteen pled guilty before Farmer’s
trial.
The proofs
at trial established that Farmer was an adviser to the leader of the
organization, Raymond Stovall. Over the two months Stovall’s phone was
wiretapped in 2018, Farmer told Stovall how to transport money and drugs,
sought to invest money in drug packages, helped Stovall look for a missing drug
package, travelled to Michigan from his home in greater Atlanta to meet with
Stovall, informed Stovall that he was sending ecstasy to Michigan, and plotted
to help Stovall obtain additional methamphetamine from a source in Benton
Harbor, Farmer’s hometown. Farmer also harbored Antwan Mims – an unindicted
co-conspirator convicted of two counts of first-degree murder by a Berrien
County jury earlier this year – while he was a fugitive wanted for those
homicides. Farmer and Mims were found by an FBI SWAT team in a drug house
outside of Atlanta along with a pound of methamphetamine, heroin, other drugs,
packaging materials, and a loaded, stolen firearm.
"The
jury saw Richard Farmer for the drug dealer the evidence showed he was,"
said U.S. Attorney Birge. "The lesson here is that if you choose to get
into the business of illegally trafficking these dangerous drugs in West
Michigan, law enforcement agencies from far and wide will work together to
bring you to justice."
"This
case exemplifies the cooperation among federal, state, and local law
enforcement agencies to dismantle dangerous criminal organizations that
threaten the safety of our communities," said Timothy R. Slater, Special
Agent in Charge of the FBI Detroit Division. "The FBI will continue to
target the leadership of these organizations – and those who facilitate their
crimes – in order to stop the increase in violence and crime associated with
these multi-state drug trafficking organizations."
"Farmer
was part of a drug distribution network spanning from Georgia to Western
Michigan," said Timothy J. Plancon, Special Agent in Charge of the Detroit
Field Division of the DEA.
"This
successful conviction is a testimony to the dedication and hard work of our
federal and local law enforcement partners and the United States Attorney’s
Office. We will continue our relentless pursuit to identify and investigate
those trafficking illicit narcotics in our communities."
With respect
to the defendants still pending trial, the charges in the indictment are merely
accusations and are not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent
unless and until proven guilty in a court of law. The government has the burden
of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
This case is
being investigated by the FBI, the DEA, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the
Kalamazoo Valley Enforcement Team, and the Southwest Enforcement Team (a
component of the Michigan State Police), who were assisted by the U.S. Marshals
Service, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, the Michigan
Department of Corrections, the Portage Police Department, the Kalamazoo Department
of Public Safety, the Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Office, the Berrien County
Sheriff’s Office, the St. Joseph County Sheriff’s Office, and TSA
Investigations – Detroit Field Office. Farmer was tried by Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Justin M. Presant and Vito S. Solitro.
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