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Family relationships helped ensure loyalty within the group, Winchell and Moorin said. The kingpin was identified as Martin Oseguera-Chavez, 50, of Roy. Also arrested and charged were his wife, two of their daughters, one daughter's husband and the other's ex-husband, and the sister of Oseguera-Chavez's wife. Oseguera-Chavez, a Mexican citizen who has likely been in the U.S. for more than a dozen years, will likely plead not guilty to drug charges, said Michael Craig Nance, his court-appointed lawyer. He also was detained on an immigration hold. According to court filings, the investigation began April 10, 2008, after a confidential informant told an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent that the owner of a store in Tacoma was looking for customers who could buy large quantities of meth. The store owner's boss turned out to be Oseguera-Chavez, who told another informant he paid $13,000 to $14,000 a pound for meth and sold it for $18,000 to $19,000 in Washington state, a DEA agent wrote. The store owner has been arrested but not charged, said Lorie Dankers, an ICE spokeswoman. Only two or three of those in custody were cocaine or meth users, said Emily Langlie, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office. "They don't take these drugs. They just sell them," Sullivan said.
[Associated
Press;
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