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Alamogordo Man Pleads Guilty To Meth Charges

 ALBUQUERQUE – Justin Aaron Hudkins, 33, of Alamogordo, N.M., pleaded guilty today in federal court in Las Cruces, N.M., to methamphetamine trafficking crime charges.

Hudkins was one of 34 individuals charged in December 2015 with federal and tribal drug offenses as the result of an 18-month multi-agency investigation led by the DEA and BIA into methamphetamine trafficking on the Mescalero Apache Reservation.  Eighteen defendants, including five members of the Mescalero Apache Tribe and 13 non-Natives were charged in six federal indictments and a federal criminal complaint.  Sixteen other members of the Mescalero Apache Tribe were charged in tribal criminal complaints approved by the Mescalero Apache Tribal Court.

The investigation leading to the federal and tribal charges was initiated in May 2014, in response to an increase in violent crime on the Mescalero Apache Reservation perpetrated by methamphetamine users.  The investigation initially targeted a drug trafficking organization that was allegedly distributing methamphetamine within the Reservation, and later expanded to include two other drug trafficking organizations in southeastern New Mexico that allegedly served as sources of supply for the methamphetamine distributed within the Reservation.  In Aug. 2014, the investigation was designated as part of the Justice Department’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) program, which combines the resources and unique expertise of federal agencies, along with their local counterparts, in a coordinated effort to disrupt and dismantle major drug trafficking organizations.  The investigation is one of the first OCDETF investigations to utilize electronic surveillance (wiretaps) in Indian Country.  More than ten kilograms of methamphetamine were seized during the course of the investigation.

Hudkins was arrested on an indictment charging him and seven co-conspirators with conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine in Otero County, N.M., between April 9, 2015 and Oct. 16, 2015, and other drug trafficking offenses.  During today’s proceedings, Hudkins entered a guilty plea to participating in a methamphetamine trafficking conspiracy and using a communications device to facilitate a drug trafficking crime.  In his plea agreement, Hudkins admitted that in Aug. and Sept. 2015, he obtained gram quantities of methamphetamine from a co-defendant, which he sold to other individuals.

   At sentencing, Hudkins faces a maximum of 20 years in federal prison followed by not less than three years of supervised release.  A sentencing hearing has yet to be scheduled.

Hudkins is the 12th of the 18 federal defendants to enter a guilty plea.  The remaining six federal defendants have entered not guilty pleas to the charges against them.  Charges in indictments are merely accusations and defendants are presumed innocent unless found guilty in a court of law.

The federal and tribal cases were investigated by the Las Cruces office of the DEA, District IV of the BIA’s Office of Justice Services (Mescalero Agency), BIA’s Division of Drug Enforcement, Mescalero Tribal Police Department, Hatch Police Department, FBI and Lea County Drug Task Force.  Assistant U.S. Attorney Terri J. Abernathy of the U.S. Attorney’s Las Cruces Branch Office is prosecuting the federal cases, and Mescalero Tribal Prosecutor Melissa Chavez is prosecuting the tribal cases.

Information from Department of Justice