Home News Sacramento Trio Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Fentanyl-Laced Pills, Faces Potential Life Sentences

Sacramento Trio Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Fentanyl-Laced Pills, Faces Potential Life Sentences

Sacramento Trio Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Fentanyl-Laced Pills, Faces Potential Life Sentences

Three men from Sacramento have pled guilty to charges including their participation in a drug trafficking organization that distributed counterfeit medications laced with fentanyl and other substances. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of California, Jose Guadalupe Lopez-Zamora, 30, Joaquin Alberto Sotelo Valdez, 27, and Jose Luis Aguilar Saucedo, 28, have all acknowledged their involvement in a criminal scheme that smuggled hazardous materials into communities in Northern California.

This network’s head is identified as Lopez-Zamora, whose operations may be traced back to at least May 2019 and continue until January 2021. The strength of these drugs claimed numerous lives across the country, and tens of thousands of fentanyl-laced “M-30” pills reached Californians through their usual networks from Mexico. Lopez-Zamora and Sotelo Valdez both entered guilty pleas to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute cocaine, methamphetamine, and fentanyl, indicating the seriousness of the offenses. Throughout the spring and summer of 2020, Aguilar Saucedo was in charge of selling hundreds of fentanyl pills.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and several federal, state, and local agencies are working together on the extensive investigation that caught these men. As a component of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF), their combined front aims to take down the most dangerous criminal organizations. While others await the resolution of their charges, Alejandro Tello, one of the co-defendants in the operation, is scheduled to be sentenced on April 22, 2025. They are holding to the presumption of innocence, which is guaranteed until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

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Aguilar Saucedo faces a statutory possibility of up to 40 years in prison, while Lopez-Zamora and Sotelo Valdez could receive life sentences, which would be appropriate given the seriousness of their illegal activity and its effects on society. On March 10, 2025, U.S. District Judge Dale A. Drozd will decide the final punishments, despite the guidelines recommend minimums of 10 and 5 years, respectively.

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