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Former mail carrier gets 15 years for drug trafficking

He was caught with parcels of cocaine and fentanyl was found in his home

A conceptual photo of a pair of handcuffs on a floor, with light casting a shadow from jail cell bars nearby
The USPS Office of Inspector General sting operation included help from the Postal Inspection Service and Drug Enforcement Administration.

A former mail carrier was recently sentenced to 15 years in federal prison and ordered to pay $65,000 for his role in trafficking drugs in Yonkers, NY.

Agents with the USPS Office of Inspector General, also known as the OIG, suspected parcels of narcotics were being sent to trafficking organizations in Yonkers.

Their list of suspects eventually whittled down to one: The carrier.

The man was found to be falsely marking parcels as delivered only to bring them home with him.

A sting operation — with the help of the Postal Inspection Service and Drug Enforcement Administration — caught the carrier with three parcels containing a total of 6 kilograms of cocaine.

A search of the man’s home found a safe containing $12,000 in cash, a handgun and 300 grams of fentanyl — an amount that could have killed as many as 150,000 people, according to OIG agents.

“The American public places its trust in Postal Service employees to uphold the integrity of the U.S. Mail,” said Tammy Hull, the Postal Service’s inspector general. “The trafficking of life-threatening narcotics through the postal system gravely undermines that trust. The USPS OIG is unwavering in its commitment to prevent such abuses and to hold any complicit employees fully accountable.”

The OIG recently highlighted the case on its website.

If you suspect or know of mail theft involving Postal Service employees or contractors, report it to the OIG.