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Sentence Announced for Final Defendant Convicted in Operation of Paterson Opioid Mill

Paterson

Acting Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin today announced a seven-year prison sentence for a Pennsylvania resident convicted in the operation of a Passaic County opioid mill that distributed bulk quantities of fentanyl and heroin reportedly linked to more than a dozen fatal overdoses. 

The illegal drug manufacturing enterprise was dismantled in March 2020 as a result of an investigation led by the New Jersey State Police (NJSP) Trafficking North Unit, working within the NJSP Opioid Enforcement Task Force (OETF).

According to Acting Attorney General Platkin, Angel Ramirez, 36, of Hazelton, PA, was sentenced to seven years in prison by Superior Court Judge Marilyn C. Clark in Passaic County on August 26, 2022.

Ramirez pleaded guilty to first-degree maintaining or operating a controlled dangerous substance (CDS) facility on July 19, 2022. Under the plea agreement, Ramirez was sentenced as a second-degree offender.

Acting Attorney General Platkin said that Ramirez is one of five defendants convicted on charges related to the operation of an opioid mill being run from a residence on 9th Avenue in Paterson and served as a distribution point for narcotics in the area. 

During the execution of a search warrant at the residence in March 2020, 497 bricks (24,850 folds) of heroin/fentanyl, 600 grams of unpackaged heroin/fentanyl, and packaging paraphernalia were recovered. 

The following three defendants previously pleaded guilty and were sentenced for their role in the operation:

  • Anthony Rosario, 38, of Paterson, was sentenced to 10 years in state prison on July 19, 2020. Rosario pleaded guilty to first-degree maintaining or operating a CDS facility on May 16, 2022.
  • Luis Peguero-Ortiz, 35, of Bronx, NY, was sentenced to seven years in state prison on July 19, 2022. Peguero-Ortiz pleaded guilty to first-degree maintaining or operating a CDS facility on May 10, 2022.
  • Marlo Costa-Santiseben, 27, of Paterson, was sentenced to three years in state prison on August 24, 2022. Costa-Santiseben pleaded guilty to second-degree conspiracy to distribute CDS on April 12, 2022. Under the plea agreement, Costa-Santiseben was sentenced as a third-degree offender.

The fifth defendant convicted in the illegal enterprise, Ricky Rodriguez, 37, of Paterson, pleaded guilty to first-degree possession of CDS with intent to distribute on June 18, 2020. He is currently a fugitive from justice.

The mill operators allegedly distributed their narcotics in wax folds stamped with brand names linked to 22 total suspected overdoses across New Jersey, including 14 fatal overdoses, according to NJSP reports.

“­By dismantling this drug mill and putting its operators behind bars, we have cut off a major source of illegal fentanyl and heroin from reaching the streets of Paterson,” Acting Attorney General Platkin said. 

“The prison sentences we secured for these defendants demonstrate our resolve to protecting the public and holding drug traffickers accountable for the harm they inflict on communities throughout our state.”

During a two-month investigation, detectives from the NJSP Trafficking North Unit, working within the OETF, determined that an opioid mill was being operated from the 9th Avenue residence. 

According to Acting Attorney General Platkin, on March 6, 2020, detectives from the New Jersey State Police Trafficking North Unit, along with members of the State Police T.E.A.M.S, K9, and Hazmat Units, executed a search warrant at the residence. 

In addition to the drugs recovered, detectives seized 11 different stamps used to brand packaged narcotics, cutting agents, several cellular phones, and sifters and grinders, which are all consistent with a narcotics production facility. 

Drug traffickers market their “brand” of drug by ink-stamping the outside of a wax fold with a unique image, word, or phrase.

In just under four years, the OETF has conducted 319 enforcement operations and seized:

  • More than 1,263,951 individual doses of packaged opioids valued at $6,319,755
  • More than 110 kilograms of raw heroin valued at $6,600,000
  • More than 207 kilograms of fentanyl valued at $10,350,000
  • More than 79,000 fentanyl-based pills valued at $790,000
  • More than 151 kilograms of cocaine valued at $5,436,000
  • More than 28 kilograms of methamphetamine valued at $280,000
  • More than $4,673,440 in U.S. currency
  • 317 firearms

The OETF has also disrupted or dismantled 59 fully operational opioid packaging facilities, eight fully operational fentanyl pill-pressing operations, and arrested 650 suspects during this time. 

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