Crime & Safety
Two Lawrence Men Sentenced For Trafficking in Fentanyl
First convictions by the AG's Office under the new fentanyl trafficking law.

LAWRENCE – Two Lawrence men pleaded guilty to trafficking fentayl, the first conviction by the state Attorney's General 's Office under under the state's new to be Fentayl trafficking law.
In Essex County Superior Court on Friday, Regla Santana (a.k.a. Miguel Carrasquillo) age 49, and Antonio Rivera, age 48, pleaded guilty to the charges of Trafficking Fentanyl (two counts each), Conspiracy to Violate the Controlled Substances Act (one count each). Santana also pleaded guilty to Furnishing a False Name at Arrest (one count), according to Attorney General Maura Healey.
Following the plea, Judge Thomas Drechsler sentenced each defendant to serve three- to four -years in state prison. Rivera also was sentenced to serve two years of probation after he is released.
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The legislation to criminalize the trafficking of fentanyl, filed by AG Healey and then House Judiciary Chairman John Fernandes (D-Milford), went into effect in February of 2016. Prior to the law going into effect, drug traffickers could only be charged with the lesser crimes of manufacturing, distributing or possessing fentanyl, regardless of the quantity of the drug.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is estimated to be 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and 30 to 50 times more powerful than heroin. Drug traffickers frequently mix the drug with heroin, without the knowledge of the buyer. It can be deadly in even low doses.
“Fentanyl caused opioid-related deaths in Massachusetts to skyrocket to nearly 2,000 last year,” Healey said in a press release.“My office is continuing to work hard on all fronts to combat this epidemic, including going after drug traffickers who pump this deadly drug onto our streets.”
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health estimates that 1,979 people – the highest number ever recorded in the state and a 13 percent increase year-over-year – died from opioid overdoses in 2016. The number of deaths from opioid overdoses involving fentanyl continued to climb last year.
Of the 1,979 estimated deaths from opioid overdoses, there was a toxicology test available for 70 percent (1,374) and of those, 75 percent tested positive for fentanyl (1,031). Essex County is among the four counties in the state with the highest rate of overdoses.
After an investigation that began in February 2016, investigators raided a Lawrence house where the defendants were allegedly selling the drugs. Authorities seized approximately 82 grams of fentanyl, seven pounds of narcotic mixing cut and materials known to be associated with drug packaging and distribution.
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In August of 2016, an Essex County Grand Jury indicted Santana, Rivera and Milciades Castillo-Franco (a.k.a. Jose Nogue Resto, a.k.a. Tony) age 42, also of Lawrence, on fentanyl trafficking charges. The case against Castillo-Franco is still pending.
Castillo-Franco and Santana were arrested in April 2016 in a joint operation with State Police assigned to the AG’s Office and the Transportation Drug Unit (TDU) with assistance from the New England High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (NEHIDTA) and the Lawrence Police Department. State Police assigned to the AG’s Office and the TDU arrested Rivera in September in Lawrence with assistance from Lawrence Police and the NEHIDTA.
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