HONOLULU — A California man pleaded guilty Thursday to participating in a drug ring, admitting that he hid methamphetamine in a vehicle he shipped to Hawaii. ADVERTISING HONOLULU — A California man pleaded guilty Thursday to participating in a drug
HONOLULU — A California man pleaded guilty Thursday to participating in a drug ring, admitting that he hid methamphetamine in a vehicle he shipped to Hawaii.
As part of a plea agreement, Eric Castro, 34, is expected to receive a 10-year sentence on Jan. 12.
Castro of Galt, California, was part of a drug ring that dealt 60 pounds of meth in Hawaii between 2001 and 2005, Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris Thomas said. Castro stored 8 ½ pounds of meth inside the engine of a Jeep Cherokee he shipped from California to the Big Island in 2005, according to court documents.
The arrests of Castro and his three co-defendants put a dent in Hawaii’s drug trade, Thomas said.
“The case did have an impact on drug distribution on the Big Island,” he said outside of court.
Authorities seized 7 ½ pounds of the meth shipped in the Jeep on the property of one of the co-defendants.
In 2005, the street value for a pound of meth on the Big Island was about $22,000, Thomas said. Castro was the source of the drugs that his co-defendants dealt on the Big Island, according to court documents, which also said that one of the men shipped 9 ½ pounds of meth from California to Hawaii in a cattle container.
Castro was a fugitive for eight years before authorities found him in California, Thomas said. The co-defendants have since pleaded guilty.