Michael Penn, 41, of Tickfaw, Louisiana, admitted in federal court today to conspiring to distribute heroin, capping a five-deal sting operation that laid bare his role in feeding addiction in the Hammond area. Penn stood before U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan and entered a guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute heroin.
The case, prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Louisiana, stems from a joint investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Hammond Police Department. Over the course of several weeks, Penn sold heroin to an undercover officer on five separate occasions—each transaction captured through audio and video surveillance at various locations across Hammond.
Court documents show Penn never knew he was dealing with law enforcement. Each sale deepened his involvement in the conspiracy, building a case that left little room for denial. The evidence, described by investigators as ‘clear and damning,’ includes footage of Penn handing over controlled substances in exchange for cash in parking lots, side streets, and secluded neighborhoods.
U.S. Attorney Duane A. Evans did not mince words in announcing the plea: ‘This conviction disrupts a steady flow of deadly heroin into our communities.’ He credited the persistence of DEA agents and Hammond officers whose undercover work dismantled Penn’s operation from the inside.
Now facing a maximum of 20 years in federal prison, Penn awaits sentencing scheduled for June 13, 2018. Federal prosecutors, led by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brittany L. Reed, are expected to push for the harshest penalties under sentencing guidelines, citing the repeated nature of the offenses and the danger posed to public safety.
The case underscores the ongoing battle against opioid distribution in rural and suburban Louisiana, where drugs like heroin fuel crime and devastate families. With Penn behind bars pending trial, authorities say they’re not slowing down. ‘Every conviction,’ said one DEA source, ‘rips another link out of the chain.’
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Key Facts
- State: Louisiana
- Agency: DOJ USAO
- Category: Drug Trafficking
- Source: Official Source ↗
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