Henry T. Little-Proctor, a 27-year-old McKeesport man known as ‘Bundles,’ is headed to federal prison for a decade after being sentenced for trafficking heroin and fentanyl, including a lethal dose that killed a young woman in July 2016. The Pittsburgh federal court handed down the 10-year sentence following Little-Proctor’s guilty plea to five counts of violating federal narcotics and firearms laws, U.S. Attorney Scott W. Brady confirmed today.
Little-Proctor admitted to conspiring to distribute, and possessing with intent to distribute, both heroin and fentanyl between late 2015 and July 20, 2016. Federal investigators tied him directly to a fentanyl sale on July 13, 2016, and a heroin sale just five days later on July 18. The DEA executed a search warrant on July 20 at a residence he used, where agents recovered 25 ‘bundles’—250 stamp bags—of heroin, along with Full Metal Jacketed .223 Rem and .22 caliber ammunition.
Inside the home, investigators also found a receipt from Gander Mountain dated May 14, 2016, documenting the purchase of .223 Rem ammunition, two extended magazines for an AR-15 rifle, and a $100 tactical light. Despite the discovery of the ammo and accessories, the firearms themselves remain missing. Federal law bars anyone with a prior felony conviction from possessing firearms or ammunition—and Little-Proctor had two prior heroin dealing convictions.
Most damning: Little-Proctor admitted under oath that he sold the fentanyl responsible for the July 2016 death of a young woman, whose fatal overdose became a key factor in sentencing. The case underscored the deadly reach of synthetic opioids flooding Pittsburgh’s streets, often disguised as heroin or mixed into street drugs without users’ knowledge.
U.S. District Judge Cathy Bissoon imposed the 10-year prison term, followed by six years of supervised release and ordered restitution to the victim’s family. In handing down the sentence, she weighed Little-Proctor’s criminal record alongside his family, education, and work history—but the pattern of drug dealing and the direct link to a death tipped the scale toward a hard time behind bars.
The investigation was led by DEA task force officers, with support from the Duquesne Police Department, Homestead Police Department, and Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ross E. Lenhardt prosecuted the case for the Violent Crime Section. The probe was funded through the federal OCDETF program, which coordinates resources across federal, state, and local agencies to dismantle major drug trafficking networks.
Related Federal Cases
- Minnesota Man Indicted in PA Fentanyl Death · Minnesota
- Jalen Cameron Madison Sentenced for Fentanyl and Heroin Death · Washington
- Pittsburgh Dealer Adams Gets 8 Years for Fatal Fentanyl Sale · Washington
- Kassandra Martin Gets 5 Years for Heroin, Crack, Fentanyl Ring · Pennsylvania
- Damian McKay Gets 7 Years for Fentanyl-Heroin Conspiracy · Pennsylvania
Key Facts
- State: Pennsylvania
- Agency: DOJ USAO
- Category: Drug Trafficking
- Source: Official Source ↗
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