By Carl Keith Greene / Staff Writer
Trials for eight of ten people charged in a methamphetamine ring allegedly working out of Laurel County have been scheduled in U.S. District Court in London.
One of the ten indicted in February and March is apparently still on the loose.
Six were named in the first two-count indictment issued in February. In a 25-count superseding indictment in March, one of those was dropped and four added.
The trial for the eight was scheduled in federal court Thursday, by way of a telephonic pretrial conference, for Feb. 8, 2010 at 10 a.m.
Sandy Mills (aka Allsup) pleaded guilty to one count of the first indictment on Sept. 22, and is set for sentencing on Dec. 17.
In a plea agreement filed in May, Mills agreed that certain acts she committed could be proven, including that she and at least one other person conspired to make 50 grams or more of meth.
In the agreement, she admitted that on about Sept. 11 of last year, she and Edward Wagers, also a defendant, were arrested by Laurel County law enforcement officers in a traffic stop.
The officers, the statement says, found a bag of pseudoephedrine, starter fluid, Coleman fuel, lithium batteries, coffee filters and other items used in making meth.
After she was arrested, the document states, she told police Wagers was her only source for meth and she got about a half gram of meth about every other day.
She also told police she had been at Wagers’ home in Knox County many times when he was making meth and helped him by cleaning equipment used in the process.
She said she had been aware for about the past two years of Wagers’ production of meth and had seen about 20 sales by Wagers of the product.
Those sales sometimes were funded by the buyer by trading 40-gram oxycodone tables for the meth.
She named other conspirators including Edgar Bowling and Cleve Smith, both also named in the indictments. She told of Wagers getting anhydrous ammonia from Bowling for use in making meth in tanks intended for oxygen.
Also, she said, buyers would swap pseudoephedrine for meth. Typically, she said a box of pseudoephedrine would be worth a quarter gram of meth.
Along with Bowling, Cleve Smith and Wagers, Kenneth Adams, Mark. E. Smith, Rodney Bishop, Charles Jones and Jordan Smith will be tried in February. Richard Goley, also charged in the indictment, has apparently evaded arrest thus far.
All are charged in the first two counts of the indictment, with conspiring to make meth and in the second count conspiring to distribute the drug.
Wagers was charged alone on two counts, possessing pseudoephedrine for making meth and possessing oxycodone to be distributed.
In three counts, Cleve, Mark and Jordan Smith and Charles Jones were charged with possessing pseudoephedrine and meth as well as having equipment to make meth.
Mark Smith was also charged with managing and controlling a camper on KY 229 in Knox County as a place to make meth.
Goley and Bowling were charged with possessing pseudoephedrine for making meth.
Goley and Bishop were charged with having meth for distribution.
Adams was charged with having equipment to make meth and intending to distribute meth.
Bishop and Bowling were also charged with having equipment to make meth and distributing meth.
Bishop, Bowling, Cleve Smith and Wagers were also charged with using firearms.
Those charged are subject, if convicted, to up to life in prison and/or millions in fines.
Local News
Laurel drug ring trial set for February
- Local News
-
-
Sawyers named Times-Tribune publisher
Longtime Sentinel-Echo Publisher Willie Sawyers has been named regional publisher with oversight of both the London paper and the Times-Tribune in Corbin.
-
7 arrested in drug roundup
Seven people were arrested Thursday following a two-month investigation that involved undercover buys of prescription drugs, according to Corbin Police Public Affairs Officer Major Rob Jones.
-
Police seek man wanted for home burglaries
Police are seeking the public’s help in finding a man they believe is responsible for the theft of thousands of dollars worth of jewelry from several burglarized homes in Williamsburg and Whitley County, according to Williamsburg Police Chief Wayne Bird.
-
No report yet on body of Bright
The body of Delmer Bright was returned from the Kentucky Medical Examiner’s office Wednesday by Knox Coroner Mike Blevins.
-
Area legislators wait and see on redistricting
If the courts find the State Legislature’s redistricting plan constitutional, State Representative Marie Rader will find her 89th House District changing dramatically — with a razor-thin strip through the middle of Laurel County, connecting both Jackson and McCreary Counties.
-
Whitley, McCreary Farm Service Agencies to meet today
At 2 p.m. today at the Whitley County Extension office, agriculturalists will discuss the consolidation of the Whitley and McCreary counties’ USDA Farm Service Agencies.
-
Police Roundup - Feb. 2, 2012
London’s Kentucky State Police post has received a report of a scam or fraud trying to get credit or debit card account numbers.
-
Corbin sewer repairs to continue through May
Those crews doing work in the rain on some downtown Corbin streets Wednesday were digging in for a reason — to stop water from getting into the city’s sanitary sewer collection system. And the work will continue at times throughout the next few months before it’s finished.
-
Corbin Main Street prepares for new year
The man who heads Corbin’s Main Street Program says it’s time to do some exciting things. And they run from starting the early stages of master planning for the downtown area, all the way to introducing a new, user-friendly website for his organization.
-
Man dies after crash with train
Delmer Bright, 83, of Flat Lick, was pronounced dead Tuesday at Knox County Hospital just after 1 p.m.
- More Local News Headlines
-









