Georgia Man Sentenced to More Than 17 Years in Prison for Trafficking Fentanyl and Methamphetamine from Inside an Alabama Prison
MOBILE, AL – A Temple, Georgia man was sentenced to 210 months in prison for conspiring to distribute bulk fentanyl and methamphetamine while incarcerated in an Alabama prison.
According to court documents, Justin Brian Melton, 35, was convicted of trafficking heroin in the Circuit Court of Mobile County, Alabama in 2022. The state court sentenced Melton to serve 20 years in prison. Melton served that sentence at the Ventress prison in Clayton, Alabama.
Between March 2023 and May 2024, while incarcerated at Ventress, Melton used contraband cell phones to orchestrate shipments of bulk fentanyl and methamphetamine from the Atlanta, Georgia area into southern Alabama and elsewhere. In November 2023, agents arrested one of Melton’s coconspirators in Atmore, Alabama and seized half a kilogram of fentanyl from him. Melton’s coconspirator was on his way back from Atlanta after completing a bulk fentanyl deal that Melton had brokered. Agents extracted the contents of the coconspirator’s cell phone, which contained several messages between Melton and the coconspirator about coordinating bulk fentanyl and methamphetamine transactions.
Agents obtained AT&T records regarding the contraband cell phones that Melton used to broker drug deals while he was in prison. The phones were subscribed in Melton’s name. Cell tower location data for the phones showed that during the conspiracy, the phones consistently pinged off the same cell tower in the vicinity of the Ventress prison. Additionally, agents captured recorded communications between Melton and coconspirators that showed Melton using contraband phones from state prison.
In addition to the 210-month prison sentence, Chief United States District Judge Jeffrey U. Beaverstock ordered Melton to serve a ten-year term of supervised release upon his release from prison, during which time he will be subject to drug testing and treatment. The court did not impose a fine, but Judge Beaverstock ordered Melton to pay $200 in special assessments.
U.S. Attorney Sean P. Costello of the Southern District of Alabama made the announcement.
The Drug Enforcement Administration, the Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office, and the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency investigated the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Roller prosecuted the case on behalf of the United States.