Maryland Cocaine Trafficker Gets 10 Year Prison Sentence
Timothy
Joseph Carr, 29, of Baltimore, was sentenced Thursday, January 3, 2013 to 10
years in prison followed by five years of supervised release by U.S. District
Judge William D. Quarles Jr. for conspiring to distribute five kilograms or
more of cocaine.
The
sentencing follows an investigation by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) with the assistance
of the Louisiana State Police.
According
to his guilty plea, on Nov. 10, 2011 Louisiana State Police seized
approximately five kilograms of cocaine from a vehicle driven by co-defendant
Daniel Bois in Louisiana, who was driving the
cocaine from Texas to its Baltimore destination. After arresting Bois,
law enforcement continued its investigation into the cocaine organization based
in Baltimore
and conducted a controlled delivery of the cocaine the following day.
The
cocaine was replaced with "sham cocaine" and delivered to 3501 8th Avenue in Baltimore, where
co-defendants Timothy Dennison and Anthony Taylor accessed the vehicle where
law enforcement had concealed the sham cocaine. Law enforcement arrested
Dennison and Taylor.
Further
investigation revealed that Carr had also driven, in a separate rental car from
Bois, another load of five kilograms of cocaine back to Baltimore
from McAllen, Texas, Nov. 10, 2011. According to travel
records, Carr rented a car Nov. 7, 2011 after flying to McAllen
from BWI Airport. Additionally, Carr and other
members of the cocaine organization had made several trips between Baltimore and Texas in
the past year to transport several additional kilograms of cocaine for
distribution in the Baltimore
area.
In
all, Carr conspired to distribute between five and 15 kilograms of cocaine.
Timothy
Lee Dennison, 22, Daniel Bois, 26 and Anthony Fraser Taylor, 29, all of Baltimore, and two other
co-defendants pleaded guilty to their participation in the conspiracy. Dennison
was sentenced to 15 years in prison and the other defendants remain to be
sentenced.
The
case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brooke Carey and Christopher
Romano.
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