Crime & Safety
New York Man Gets 15 Years for Dealing Oxycodone
Manuel Tirado was sentenced after a multi-agency, multi-year investigation; all but one involved under investigation are also in prison.

CONCORD, NH — A drug dealer from the Dominican Republic has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for dealing Oxycodone. Manuel Tirado, 34, of New York City, received the sentence on Jan. 3, 2017, for participating in a conspiracy to distribute oxycodone pills and failing to appear in court, according to U.S. Attorney Emily Gray Rice.
Court documents and statements in court showed that Tirado was a New York-based source of supply who provided oxycodone pills to a group of drug traffickers who were distributing the pills in Manchester.
During a law enforcement investigation in 2013 and 2014 that included the use of controlled purchases of drugs and multiple wiretaps, investigators learned that Samuel Garcia, Jennifer Nunez, and others were actively involved in the distribution of oxycodone pills. Wiretap conversations revealed that Tirado arranged to supply some of these pills.
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On multiple occasions, intercepted calls showed that members of the conspiracy (Raul Hernandez and Jose Nunez) traveled to New York, obtained pills from Tirado, and then brought them back to New Hampshire. On one occasion, Jose Nunez was stopped in Massachusetts while transporting $18,900 in cash that was to be used to pay for oxycodone pills that were being supplied by Tirado.
Several targets of the investigation were arrested in Manchester on Aug. 27, 2014. Hernandez was arrested as he attempted to deliver more than 600 oxycodone pills to the residence of Samuel Garcia and Jennifer Nunez on Eastern Avenue in Manchester. A search warrant was executed at that residence and hundreds of additional pills, as well as over $30,000 in cash, and three firearms were recovered from that location. Garcia, Jennifer Nunez, and Johanna Nunez were arrested that day. Jose Nunez was arrested in October of 2014, after returning to the United States from the Dominican Republic.
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Tirado was later indicted on a drug conspiracy charge. On July 23, 2015, he was arrested in New York. He was released on bond by a judge in New York and was directed to appear for an arraignment in federal court in New Hampshire on Aug. 4, 2015. Tirado did not appear in Court and a warrant was issued for his arrest. He was arrested again in New York on Aug. 17, 2015.
Tirado pleaded guilty to the drug conspiracy charge and the failure to appear charge on Aug. 23, 2016.
All of the other individuals who were involved in this conspiracy also have pleaded guilty. An additional defendant, Edward Anthony Hiciano Beltre, is a fugitive.
In addition to these defendants, several additional individuals who obtained oxycodone from this organization and resold it to customers have pleaded guilty to federal drug conspiracy charges. Ryan Demers, William Alba, Bonnie Labrie, Krystal Mailhot, and Yonajaira Galarza Ramos have all entered guilty pleas in federal court.
“The DEA is committed to investigating and bringing to justice those who illicitly distribute oxycodone,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Michael J. Ferguson. “Opiate abuse is a major problem in New Hampshire and throughout New England. The diversion of prescription pain killers, in this case oxycodone, contributes to the widespread abuse of opiates, is the gateway to heroin and fentanyl addiction, and is devastating our communities. This investigation demonstrates the strength of collaborative law enforcement efforts in New Hampshire and our strong partnership with the U.S. Attorney’s Office to aggressively pursue any group or individual that traffics these drugs.”
U.S. Attorney Rice stated, “Many individuals begin their journey to opiate addiction through oxycodone use. While these pills have a legitimate medical use, the illicit distribution of these potentially addictive drugs has been a significant factor in the development of the opiate crisis that is affecting New Hampshire. The U.S. Attorney’s office will continue to work with the law enforcement community to stop the flow of opiates and opioids onto the streets of New Hampshire. This includes identifying and prosecuting sources who are arranging to bring these dangerous drugs into our state. This office also will take aggressive steps to prosecute those who disregard court orders by failing to appear in court.”
Submitted by Dena Blanco.
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