KTLA

8 charged in connection with Compton-to-Alaska drug trafficking network

The office of U.S. Atty. Nick Hanna, shown during a news conference in June, charged eight people in what was described as a drug distribution network that shipped bulk quantities of cocaine from Compton to Alaska.(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

Federal authorities have charged eight people in what they described as a drug distribution network that shipped bulk quantities of cocaine from Compton to Alaska.

Using women as couriers, the ring sent cocaine and other narcotics to Alaska and Oregon on commercial flights, an indictment says. The document, which indicates that investigators had secretly been monitoring the group’s phone calls and reading their text messages, describes a series of drug transactions that took place between April 2015 and August 2016.

Asia Dawnta Williams, a resident of Chicago, was caught trying to smuggle nearly 150 grams of heroin onto a flight out of Los Angeles International Airport in her clothing, the indictment says. Another woman, who wasn’t charged or identified, successfully snuck a kilogram of cocaine onto a flight out of Long Beach Airport and delivered it to a conspirator in Oregon, according to the indictment.

In the parking lot of an Anchorage motel, Natasha Monique Bushner, a resident of Los Angeles, delivered a package containing nearly 2 kilograms of cocaine to Margus Gipson, a resident of Compton, the indictment says. Authorities interrupted the handoff and seized the cocaine and $12,500 in cash.

Read the full story on LATimes.com.