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A man hailing from Atlanta has been sentenced to over 21 years in prison following his plea agreement for charges related to money laundering and collaborating to distribute methamphetamine and cocaine in Johnson City, as reported on Monday.
The Eastern District of Tennessee’s Department of Justice, located in Greeneville, announced that Spencer Allen Bradley, 33, has been sentenced to 262 months of imprisonment, followed by five years of supervised release, as detailed in their release.
Legal documents revealed in the course of this case indicated that the FBI and Johnson City Police Department, among other authorities, began investigating a “drug trafficking organization” in July 2020. The probe aimed at tackling the organized spread of cocaine, crack cocaine, and methamphetamine in the Northeast Tennessee region.
The investigation found that Bradley, along with several other individuals, was involved in the operation.
The DOJ release stated, “Rachel Bowers and Spencer Bradley, who resided together, were involved in the digital transfer of extensive sums of money using shared financial accounts to facilitate and receive payments from drug transactions, with suspicious transaction totals reaching $403,455. Spencer Bradley and Hunter Bowers utilized a business setup to disguise and clean the illegal proceeds from drug sales.”
The release also identified that Bradley and Shannon Bryant employed the home of James Williams as the center for their trafficking activities.
The document further explains, “Bradley and Bryant transported, or arranged for the transportation of, substantial quantities of methamphetamine and cocaine into the Johnson City vicinity. Through the use of informants and undercover operators, law enforcement executed multiple controlled drug purchases involving Spencer Bradley, his sibling Camara Bradley, and James Williams.”
Additionally, the release said the FBI, by way of wiretapping Bradley’s cellphone, identified several additional suspects “who worked for [Bradley] in the distribution of methamphetamine and cocaine.”
The release said in September 2023, one of Bradley’s cohorts was stopped by police in Loudon County, Tennessee, and found to have been in possession of four pounds of meth.
Individuals who were involved in the drug trafficking organization and were previously convicted and sentenced are as follows, according to the release:
- Montdail Brown received a sentence of 228 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy, as well as his possession of a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).
- Shannon Bryant received a sentence of 170 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Gabrielle Greenlee received a sentence of 60 months for her involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Camara Bradley received a sentence of 60 months imprisonment for her involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Rachel Bowers received a sentence of 36 months imprisonment for her involvement in the drug conspiracy and conspiracy to commit money laundering.
- Timothy Malone received a sentence of 168 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Thomas Dennis, Jr., received a sentence of 167 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Dustin Wells received a sentence of 66 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- James Williams received a sentence of 80 months imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
- Rashad Harrington received a sentence of 78 months term of imprisonment for his involvement in the drug conspiracy.
“This case is part of the Take Back America Task Force, led by Homeland Security Investigations and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement with support from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the United States Marshals Service, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives,” the release states. “Operation Take Back America is a nationwide federal initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime.”