
Bowers and Gordon face a maximum of 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $1 million. Limoges, Reardon, and Willey face a mandatory minimum of five years in prison and a maximum sentence of 40 years, as well as a fine of up to $5 million. If convicted, most of the defendants charged on April 18, 2018, also face a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life, as well as a fine of up to $10 million. Leon Mandigo has not yet been taken into custody.

Jared Ortega-Peguero, 25, of Lawrence, MA.Alexander Noonan, 20, of Haverhill, MA.Juan Rafael Tejeda-Jimenez, 27, of Lawrence, MA.Luis Antonio Salomon Polanco, 20, of Lawrence, MA.Edward Brailey Delacruz, 24, of Methuen, MA.Jepherson Emmanuel Cabrera, 18, of Lawrence, MA.Frailin Manuel Gomez Gil, 26, of Lawrence, MA.Luis Angel Polanco Huma, 22, of Lawrence, MA.Jhonny Jose Naut Perez, 53, of Lawrence, MA.Luz Perez DeMartinez, 25, of Lawrence, MA.

On April 4, 2018, the following people were charged with participating in a conspiracy to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute, fentanyl: The indictments are the culmination of a year-long investigation by the DEA in coordination with federal, state, and local authorities in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Maine. Attorney Scott Murray with Albert Angelucci, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), New England Field Division. The Martinez brothers also allegedly employed individuals responsible for making sure distributors were consistently supplied with 200-gram bags of fentanyl and were returning drug proceeds made from the sales. They allegedly maintained a residence in Lawrence, staffed by dispatchers who took drug orders over various “customer phones.” This residence was called “the base.” Dispatchers allegedly then communicated with distributors located throughout the Merrimack Valley to arrange for customers to meet them. The Martinez brothers allegedly used a vast network of dispatchers and distributors to serve customers large and small with knowledge that a substantial amount of drugs were going to New Hampshire. The investigation focused in on an “extensive and organized” drug-trafficking organization led by the two men from Lawrence, Mass., the Martinez brothers, Sergio and Raulin.
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With this studio, they own the land and the building it will be housed in.CONCORD, NH – For now, the deadly drug pipeline between Manchester and Lawrence, Mass., has been cut off.Īpril saw the culmination of a year-long drug investigation by multiple agencies, bringing in a huge haul for law enforcement officials – 45 people arrested in two sweeps netting 30 kilograms (more than 60 pounds) of fentanyl, plus two guns and $500,000 in cash.Īuthorities announced the results of the investigation April 25 during a news conference held at the U.S. For years, they’ve had different stores in spaces they’ve leased in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, but they have since closed them to streamline their operations into a single location. The studio will be in the center of the building and, once it has been established, Blaylock and Semmelman plan to lease out the two spaces on either side of the studio for other businesses.īlaylock and Semmelmann are based out of Decatur, where they operate a warehouse. Owned by partners Brenda Blaylock and Susan Semmelmann, the studio will be housed in a 10,000 square-foot building at West Vickery Boulevard and Chisholm Trail Parkway. The design studio will take up 4,000 square feet of space in the center of the building, while building owners Brenda Blaylock and Susan Semmelmann will lease the spaces on either side.Īfter close to four years of planning, Grandeur Design will be opening a new interior design studio on West Vickery Boulevard at the end of this year.

This is a rendering of the 10,000 square-foot building that will house the new Grandeur Design studio on West Vickery Boulevard.
