PORTLAND, Ore.—On Wednesday, October 2, 2019, Jody Tremayne
Wafer, 30, of Houston, Texas, pleaded guilty for organizing and leading a
conspiracy to traffic marijuana grown in Portland to Texas.
According to court documents, drug proceeds, in the form of
bulk U.S. currency, were returned to Oregon via U.S. mail and passenger luggage
on commercial airlines. As part of this investigation, federal authorities have
seized approximately 11,000 marijuana plants, 546 pounds of processed
marijuana, more than $2.8 million in cash, 51 firearms, 26 vehicles, trailers,
pieces of heavy equipment, a yacht, and three houses used as marijuana grow
sites, all since August 2017.
Wafer pleaded guilty to one count each of conspiring to
manufacture, possess with intent to distribute, and distribute marijuana,
maintaining drug-involved premises and using and carrying a firearm during and
in relation to a drug trafficking crime.
Conspiring to manufacture, possess with intent to
distribute, and distribute marijuana and maintaining drug involved premises
carries a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison, a $5 million fine and a
lifetime of supervised release. Using or carrying a firearm in relation to a
drug trafficking crime carries a maximum sentence of life in prison with a
mandatory minimum of seven years, a $250,000 fine and five years’ supervised
release.
Wafer will be sentenced on January 8, 2010 before U.S.
District Court Judge Robert E. Jones.
As part of his plea agreement, Wafer has agreed to forfeit
any criminally-derived proceeds and property used to facilitate his crimes
identified by the government prior to sentencing.
Co-defendants Trent Lamar Knight, 31, and Brittany Lesanta
Kizzee, 29, also of Houston; Paul Eugene Thomas, 39, and Raleigh Dragon Lau,
33, both of Portland; and Cole William Griffiths, 31, of Hood River, Oregon
have all pleaded guilty on related charges. Knight and Kizzee with be sentenced
on October 22, 2019 and January 7, 2020, respectively; Lau and Thomas will be
sentenced on December 10 and 18, 2019, respectively; and Griffiths will be
sentenced on November 20, 2019.
This case was investigated by the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration, IRS Criminal Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations
and the FBI. It is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
District of Oregon.
This case was brought as part of the Justice Department’s
Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) program, the
centerpiece of the department’s strategy for reducing the availability of drugs
in the U.S. OCDETF was established in 1982 to mount a comprehensive attack on
drug trafficking by disrupting and dismantling major drug trafficking and money
laundering organizations. Today, OCDETF combines the resources and expertise of
its member federal agencies in coordination with state and local law
enforcement.
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