Meth and Cocaine Drug Trafficking Organization Dismantled

Jim Kouri, CPP
Federal agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) along with state and local law enforcement officers have arrested 31 people following a lengthy investigation into a drug trafficking organization that supplied methamphetamine and cocaine from Mexico for distribution in Washington. Twenty of those arrested have been charged federally for attempt and conspiracy violations of the Controlled Substances Act.

According to court documents obtained by the National Association of Chiefs of Police, investigators identified Martin Oseguera-Chavez of Roy, Wash., as the leader of the Oseguera-Chavez Drug Trafficking Organization (DTO). He was responsible for purchasing methamphetamine and cocaine from sources in California and Mexico for distribution to DTO members in Washington.

The DTO involved a vast network of contacts in the Puget Sound region and in California. Drugs were transported along the Interstate 5 corridor in vehicles equipped with hidden compartments. Members of the DTO sought to conceal their actions, speaking with each other in coded language to describe the drugs, calling crystal methamphetamine "clothes" or "blind man" and referring to poor quality drugs as "stretched" or "bruised."

Over the past two weeks, more than 35 search warrants were executed at various locations in Washington including Carnation, Federal Way, Lynnwood, Olympia, Puyallup, Rainier, Roy, Tacoma, Vancouver and Yelm. A search warrant was also executed in Oakdale, Calif., where an idle meth lab and approximately one pound of meth was discovered. During the course of investigation, law enforcement has seized more than 19 pounds of methamphetamine, ¼ pound of cocaine, approximately $60,000 in U.S. currency, 22 vehicles (some with hidden compartments) and 23 firearms.

"The success of this joint operation is measured by the fact that we successfully dismantled a criminal drug trafficking organization from the top down," said Leigh Winchell, special agent in charge of ICE's Office of Investigations. "ICE will continue to partner with DEA and others to more effectively investigate these organizations - from smuggler to distributor - and bring to bear the complete complement of law enforcement's authorities on this threat to our communities."

"Operation Arctic Chill was a 14-month investigation that resulted in the seizures of drugs, weapons and the arrest of 31 individuals who were part of sophisticated organization operating in the state of Washington," said DEA special agent in charge Arnold R. Moorin. "The dismantlement of this organization was a collaborative effort by state, local and federal entities, critical to the success of this operation."

Below is a list of those charged, age, and residence by date of arrest:

Arrested June 30, 2009

Martin Oseguera Chavez, 50, Roy

Maria Oseguera Lopez, 50, Roy

Maria Del Socorro Oseguera Oseguera, 33, Lynnwood

Baldemar Huerta Galvan, 28, Lynnwood

Alberto Rosales Torres, 39, Tacoma

Erika Oseguera Oseguera, 26, Yelm

Rosalinda Oseguera Lopez, 44, Roy

Doug Alfonso, 48, Olympia

Rigoberto Farias Contreras, 46, Carnation

Daniel Camarena, 30, Tacoma

Miguel Mora Esquivel, 36, Federal Way

Harold Wesley Moreland, 59, Olympia

Gabriela Ludmila Safr, 28, Tacoma

Crescenciano Yanez Bucio, 30, Yelm

Bernardo Salazar Ponce, 28, Roy

Arrested June 29, 2009

Juan Pablo Rincon-Lopez, 30, Tacoma

Arrested June 13, 2009

Juan Antonio Trejo-Lopez, 30, Elma

Juan Trejo-Lopez, 37, Elma

Gregorio Gomez-Lopez, 34, Mossyrock

Eduardo Martinez, 27, Elma