logo
Rhode Island man gets 20 years after one of the state's largest fentanyl seizures

Rhode Island man gets 20 years after one of the state's largest fentanyl seizures

USA Today25-04-2025

Rhode Island man gets 20 years after one of the state's largest fentanyl seizures
Show Caption
Hide Caption
On the frontlines of the fentanyl crisis, is Naloxone the answer?
Deaths from synthetic opioids are falling. What's behind the promising trend?
A Rhode Island man will spend two decades in prison for producing and intending to distribute tens of thousands of fentanyl-laced pills disguised as pain medication, the Justice Department announced.
U.S. District Court Chief Judge John J. McConnell Jr. sentenced Jorge Pimentel, also known as "Big Head," to 20 years behind bars after he pleaded guilty in December to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fentanyl, and possession with intent to distribute fentanyl, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Rhode Island said in a statement. Law enforcement seized 19,315 fentanyl-laced pills in what federal prosecutors described as one of Rhode Island's largest fentanyl seizures.
"The seizure of a combined total of over sixteen kilograms of fentanyl-laced pills and fentanyl powder, an industrial grade high-speed pill press, and twenty-eight thousand grams of cutting agents used in the manufacturer of the fake pill seized in September 2023, is among the largest seizures of fentanyl in Rhode Island," federal prosecutors said.
In addition to the pills, federal prosecutors said Pimentel, 36, of Cranston, Rhode Island, had enough fentanyl powder in his drug lab and stash house to create more than 633,000 laced pills.
Pimentel's operation netted him $37,000 in sales, prosecutors added.
Pimentel was "not a target of an investigation that came to the FBI's attention by happenstance," prosecutors said. "He had been the target of narcotics trafficking by the Drug Enforcement Administration, and other state and federal agencies for years."
Related: A fentanyl antidote is saving lives. But it isn't ending the fentanyl crisis
Prosecutors: Man created dangerous pills in shoddy lab
According to a sentencing memorandum prosecutors filed, federal prosecutors said Pimentel knew the pills had fentanyl because he made them and went to great lengths to make them resemble Percocet.
"Defendant produced his poison in a dirty storage unit," federal prosecutors wrote. "It wasn't a lab where formulas were measured. There was no scientific formula. Drugs were mixed with blenders, sisters, and red Solo cups."
Prosecutors added that Pimentel worked with several associates to distribute the pills, such as a runner whom he hired around the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Prosecutors said Pimentel often had the runner grab pills from the storage unit and deliver them to a customer.
When Pimentel created the pills, sometimes as many as 10,000 at a time, he'd have the runner clean up the storage unit, according to court papers. He paid the runner a "few hundred dollars" per delivery and for working in the shop.
Federal prosecutors said Pimentel was a "well-established, large-scale fentanyl trafficker" by the time an undercover agent with the FBI organized four controlled sales between May 2023 and September 2023.
In a letter addressed to McConnell, Pimentel said he's learned about the harm drug abuse has on people and accepted responsibility for his actions.
"The ripple effect of crimes such as drugs in a community is undeniable," he wrote. "It wasn't until I was locked in my cell having to get in-tuned with myself that I had a revelation, forcing me to acknowledge my contribution to the harm suffered by the community."
Fentanyl kills thousands of Americans each year
Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid used in medical facilities, in small doses, for pain relief, according to Henry Ford Health. Its pain-relieving properties can be addictive and lead to overdose and death.
"Fentanyl is becoming so common and it's finding its way into other drugs sold illegally," said Dr. Tyler Trahan, who is an internal medicine doctor and addiction specialist at Henry Ford Health. "It's showing up in counterfeit pain pills, and even in drugs like cocaine and street marijuana."
Law enforcement agencies across the country have uncovered drug labs where they said people are creating synthetic pills. In Arizona, a multi-agency drug bust in Phoenix uncovered more than 1,600 pounds of meth, 735,000 fentanyl pills and 47 pounds of fentanyl power in January, enough to kill more than 15 million people, the state's Department of Public Safety said. Arizona has about 7.6 million residents.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 79,358 people died from a synthetic opioid overdose in 2023. Measures are in place to help people struggling with addiction, such as fentanyl test strips and the use of Narcan to rescue a person currently overdosing on opioids.
Contact reporter Krystal Nurse at knurse@USATODAY.com. Follow her on X @KrystalRNurse, and on BlueSky @krystalrnuse.bsky.social.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five members of north Minneapolis gang convicted on RICO, drugs charges
Five members of north Minneapolis gang convicted on RICO, drugs charges

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Five members of north Minneapolis gang convicted on RICO, drugs charges

Five members of north Minneapolis gang convicted on RICO, drugs charges originally appeared on Bring Me The News. Five members of a north Minneapolis gang were convicted in federal court last week on charges including murder. On Thursday, a federal jury convicted five members of the Highs gang on various charges. The gang operates north of West Broadway Avenue in North Minneapolis. As members of the gang, the defendants were expected to retaliate against the rival Lows gang, which operates south of West Broadway Avenue, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. The members convicted are: Tyreese Giles, 24 Trevaun Robinson, 29 William Banks, 35 Gregory Brown, 35 Josiah Taylor, 31 Giles, Robinson, Banks and Brown were convicted on federal RICO conspiracy charges. Giles was also convicted of committing a murder on behalf of the gang on Sept. 9, 2021, when he traveled to a store in Lows territory and fatally shot a Lows member, an apparent retaliatory attack to the killing of a Highs member just a few hours earlier at a Minneapolis barbershop. Taylor was convicted of conspiring to distribute controlled substances and possessing a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking. 'The Highs have long terrorized north Minneapolis, bringing drugs, violence, and murder into our community,' Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson said in a statement. 'This verdict represents yet another step in our fight against gang violence. I want to thank the coalition of federal, state, and local law enforcement partners who joined together to investigate and prosecute this violent criminal street gang. I also want to thank the Justice Department's Violent Crime & Racketeering Section for lending their expertise and partnering with the U.S. Attorney's Office on our RICO cases.' The trial was the second of back-to-back trials involving members of the Highs gang. The third trial will begin Monday. In total, more than 40 defendants are charged in the case. This story was originally reported by Bring Me The News on Jun 8, 2025, where it first appeared.

Man running late for flight makes fake bomb threat to delay takeoff, feds say
Man running late for flight makes fake bomb threat to delay takeoff, feds say

Miami Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Man running late for flight makes fake bomb threat to delay takeoff, feds say

A Michigan man arriving at the Detroit airport too late to board his California-bound flight called in a fake bomb threat to delay its takeoff, federal officials reported. John Charles Robinson, 23, of Monroe, Michigan, was arrested a day later on Friday, June 6, when he arrived at the airport to board another flight, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Michigan said in a news release. Robinson was turned away at the gate for Spirit Airlines Flight 2145, bound for Los Angeles, after arriving late at Detroit Metropolitan Airport on Thursday, June 5, prosecutors said. At 6:25 a.m., Robinson used a cell phone to call the airline to make a false threat about a bomb on the airliner, prosecutors said. 'There's gonna be someone that's gonna try to blow up that flight, 2145,' Robinson said, according to prosecutors. He gave a fake description of the supposed bomber. 'They're still threatening to do it, they're still (attempting) to do it, they said it's not going to be able to be detected. Please don't let that flight board,' he said, according to prosecutors. Robinson later confessed he hoped to delay takeoff so he would not miss the flight, the Detroit Free Press reported. Instead, authorities removed passengers from the airliner, canceled the flight and searched the plane with bomb-sniffing dogs, prosecutors said. No explosives were found. The passengers boarded another flight to Los Angeles later that day, according to The Detroit News. Robinson rebooked his flight and was arrested when he returned to the airport on charges including using a cellphone to threaten/maliciously convey false information in an attempt or alleged attempt to damage or destroy an airplane using an explosive, the newspaper reported. 'No American wants to hear the words 'bomb' and 'airplane' in the same sentence,' said U.S. Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon, Jr., in the release. 'Making this kind of threat undermines our collective sense of security and wastes valuable law enforcement resources In a statement to WWJ-TV, Spirit Airlines said the 'safety of our Guests and Team Members is our top priority.'

$38,000 Fines Waived for Ontario Amish Families Convicted for Not Using ArriveCan App
$38,000 Fines Waived for Ontario Amish Families Convicted for Not Using ArriveCan App

Epoch Times

time7 hours ago

  • Epoch Times

$38,000 Fines Waived for Ontario Amish Families Convicted for Not Using ArriveCan App

Over $38,000 in fines have been waived and convictions set aside for a group of people from an Ontario Amish community who were convicted for not using the ArriveCan app during COVID-19 lockdowns. Lawyers with The Democracy Fund (TDF) won the case after seven months of negotiations and multiple court appearances on behalf of the group known to avoid modern technology due to their faith.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store