Federal law enforcement has indicted 35 alleged members of a cross-border drug trafficking operation. Led by 53-year-old Marcos Monarrez-Mendoza and his 23-year-old son, Marcos Monarrez Jr., 23, the alleged smuggling ring is believed to have distributed millions of deadly fentanyl pills, hundreds of pounds of methamphetamine, and dozens of kilos of cocaine to U.S. cities as far from the southern border as Seattle, Washington.
The Arizona-based duo have been charged under ‘Kingpin’ statutes for operating the alleged trafficking ring alongside co-conspirators in Mexico. Monarrez Jr. had previously been arrested for involvement with a “violent street gang” distributing drugs imported from Mexico in Pennsylvania.
“Marcos Monarrez-Mendoza and his son Marcos Monarrez Jr., along with their many co-conspirators, allegedly operated a violent drug trafficking operation that smuggled massive quantities of deadly drugs from Mexico… for distribution on the streets of our communities in the Western District of Pennsylvania, as well as many other communities throughout the country,” commented U.S. Attorney Eric Olshan.
Some of the locations where the ring allegedly operated, such as the aforementioned Seattle, have seen an enormous surge in fentanyl-related deaths in the last year. King County, where the Washington city is based, logged over a thousand deadly fentanyl overdoses in 2023 – a staggering 45 percent increase from 2022.
Donald Trump has been warning for months that Joe Biden’s porous borders are “poisoning the blood” of America by enabling the spread of drugs, disease, and dangerous criminals throughout society.