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Men charged with trafficking fentanyl disguised as candy

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Men charged with trafficking fentanyl disguised as candy

Two men from Maryland face fentanyl trafficking charges after investigators found thousands of pills in candy boxes.

HARTFORD, Connecticut (WFSB) -- Two men from Maryland were charged with trafficking thousands of fentanyl pills into Connecticut.

Oscar Flores, 34, of Mount Rainier, Maryland, and 25-year-old Severo Alelar of Hyattsville, Maryland, were indicted by a federal grand jury in Hartford, according to the U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut.

According to court documents and statements made in court, Flores, Alelar and others arrived in an SUV at a meeting location in Wethersfield to sell approximately 15,000 fentanyl pills to an undercover DEA agent.

After Flores showed the undercover agent a sample on the fentanyl pills, the agent indicated that he needed to travel to another location to pick up the money. Flores, Alelar and the others followed the undercover agent’s vehicle as they traveled south into Rocky Hill.

When a Rocky Hill police officer attempted to stop the SUV for a traffic violation, the driver of it sped and ran over a roadside curb onto a grass area along the side of the road where law enforcement vehicles boxed it in.

Investigators searched the SUV and found numerous Nerds candy boxes and Skittles candy bags containing thousands of fentanyl pills.

“Trafficking fentanyl is already and undoubtedly a serious offense, but one doesn’t have to stretch their imagination too far to consider how disguising fentanyl pills in children’s candy packaging, as we allege, can result in even more tragic consequences in the community,” said U.S. Attorney Vanessa Roberts Avery. 

The indictment charged Flores and Alelar with conspiracy to distribute, and to possess with intent to distribute, 40 grams or more of fentanyl, and with possession with intent to distribute 40 grams or more of fentanyl.

“Fentanyl is causing deaths in record numbers and DEA’s top priority is to aggressively pursue anyone who distributes this poison in order to profit and destroy people’s lives,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Brian Boyle. “Illegal drug distribution ravages the very foundations of our families and communities, so every time we take pills containing fentanyl off the streets, lives are undoubtedly saved.”

Flores and Alelar have been detained since Sept. 8. Each charge carries a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment of five years a maximum term of imprisonment of 40 years.

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