Seventeen Defendants Sentenced To Prison In Multi-State Drug Trafficking And Money Laundering Conspiracy

Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

Ocala, Florida – Senior United States District Judge John Antoon II has sentenced Dudzinski Poole and sixteen co-conspirators to federal prison terms ranging from six years, up to life, imprisonment in a multi-state drug trafficking and money laundering conspiracy. Poole was the leader of a drug trafficking organization (DTO) that was responsible for distributing thousands of kilograms of methamphetamine and fentanyl with sources of supply or distributors in California, multiple other states, and China. The organization also laundered millions of dollars in drug money. Two of Poole’s co-conspirators (Michael Chester and George King, Jr.) were convicted after a ten-day jury trial in July 2024. The rest of the defendants entered guilty pleas. A summary chart of the sentences is below:

Name (Age, Residence)

Charges

Sentence

Dudzinski Edwinn Poole

a/k/a “Zink”

(50, Apopka, FL)

Possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine

(two counts)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

21 years, 10 months’ imprisonment

Melvin Tyrone Patterson, Jr.

a/k/a “Goon”

(34, Wildwood, FL)

Possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine (two counts)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

18 years, 7 months’ imprisonment

Andrew Woodruff, Jr.

a/k/a “Smurf”

(40, Mount Dora, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

30 years’ imprisonment

Jose Ivan Carbajal

a/k/a “Primo”

(35, California)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

40 years’ imprisonment

Antonio Holmes

a/k/a “Tone”

(36, Davenport, FL)

Possession with intent to distribute fentanyl

Drug trafficking conspiracy

15 years, 8 months’ imprisonment

Diego Navarro- Martinez

a/k/a “Shooter”

(34, California)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

15 years’ imprisonment

Michael Andre Chester

a/k/a “Dre”

(50, Apopka, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

Life in prison

Samantha Tiesha King

a/k/a “Mamp”

(34, Altamonte Springs, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

17 years, 6 months’ imprisonment

George Nelvin King, Jr.

(47, Altamonte Springs, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

14 years, 8 months’ imprisonment

Felisha Denise Williams

a/k/a “Lil Momma”

(35, Apopka, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

12 years, 7 months’ imprisonment

Nathaniel Donnell, Jr.

a/k/a “Bob”

(60, Wildwood, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

13 years’ imprisonment

Rodrieka Lashay Manning

a/k/a “Drieka”

(27, Apopka, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

11 years, 3 months’ imprisonment

Mohammed McDowell

a/k/a “Mo”

(45, Wildwood, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

10 years, 10 months’ imprisonment

Janice Denise Anderson

a/k/a “Butter”

(67, Mount Dora, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

10 years, 4 months’ imprisonment

Latonya Sharee Conley

a/k/a “Hershey”

(47, Mount Dora, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

10 years’ imprisonment

Oveda Denise Miller

a/k/a “Gangsta Granny”

(62, Mount Dora, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

10 years’ imprisonment

Roland Richardson

(65, Mount Dora, FL)

Drug trafficking conspiracy

Money laundering conspiracy

6 years’ imprisonment

According to court records and the evidence presented at trial, between 2017 and 2023, the DTO operated largely out of Lake County, Florida, where Poole received hundreds of shipments of methamphetamine and fentanyl from sources of supply in California, including Jose Carbajal. The drugs were transported or shipped via commercial planes and through the mail. DEA seized more than 250 pounds of drugs (mostly methamphetamine and fentanyl) during the course of the investigation.

The defendants played various roles in the DTO, such as suppliers, distributors, couriers, and courier coordinators. The couriers would fly to California from Florida with large sums of cash to purchase drugs and transport checked luggage full of drugs back to Florida on commercial flights. The conspirators sometimes purchased tickets and checked the suitcases full of drugs or cash at the airport but did not fly on the plane. The suitcases would travel to the destination where they would be picked up by other conspirators awaiting their arrival. Nearly all the flights were between the Orlando International Airport (MCO) in Florida and the Palm Springs Airport (PSP) or the Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) in California. Flight records during a two-year period show more than 400 flights between California and Orlando among the various conspirators.

The DTO also used couriers to transport large amounts of methamphetamine from Orlando to Virginia via train. In April 2022, one of these couriers was arrested at a train station in Virginia with approximately 10 pounds of methamphetamine inside a suitcase.

In addition to transporting drugs on commercial flights and trains, Poole and his associates had multiple stash houses and received hundreds of mailed packages of methamphetamine and fentanyl from California and other drugs, including fentanyl, from China. Poole’s source of supply in California (Carbajal) would ship packages that contained an average of five to ten pounds of drugs at a time. Poole would provide Carbajal various addresses to ship the drugs, including co-conspirators’ residences. Investigators identified almost 400 packages that were shipped from California as part of this conspiracy from 2019 to 2023.

The members of this DTO also conspired with one another to engage in money laundering. Poole developed an entertainment business that he used to promote concerts with famous rap artists, whom he paid with drug proceeds. Poole then commingled the profits from the ticket sales with the drug proceeds in the same business account. Members of the conspiracy also used drug proceeds to pay for various expenses of the DTO (such as flights) or funneled the proceeds through numerous financial accounts into purchases of expensive jewelry, vehicles, residences, and payments to coconspirators.

“This multi-state drug trafficking organization used a vast network to move methamphetamine and fentanyl to poison our communities,” said DEA Miami Field Division Special Agent in Charge Deanne L. Reuter. “I’m proud of the way our agents and numerous law enforcement partners worked together to bring this criminal element to justice.”

“Greed is the biggest motivation these criminal organizations know,” said Ron Loecker, Special Agent in Charge of IRS – Criminal Investigation’s Tampa Field Office. “Motivated by money, they will try to place themselves above the law to the detriment of our communities. Fortunately, our agents and staff are extremely skilled at following the money to ensure these perpetrators face justice. We are proud to work alongside our partner agencies to put a stop to these dangerous drug trafficking organizations and ensure they are held accountable.”  

This case was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation, with assistance from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; the United States Secret Service; the Florida Department of Law Enforcement; the Orlando Police Department’s Special Enforcement Division and Crime Center and Forensics Division; the Orange County Sheriff’s Office’s including the Gang Enforcement Unit; the Florida Highway Patrol; the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office; the Casselberry Police Department; the Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation; the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office; the Marion County Sheriff’s Office; the Lake County Sheriff’s Office; the Kissimmee Police Department; the St. Cloud Police Department; the Winter Park Police Department; the St. Cloud IRS Financial Crimes Task Force; and the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office (California). It was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Tyrie K. Boyer and Belkis H. Callaos.

This case was part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at www.justice.gov/OCDETF.