California Couple Sentenced to Prison for Mail Order Drug Trafficking
MIAMI – A federal district judge in Ft. Pierce sentenced a husband and wife to federal prison yesterday for working with a foreign drug trafficking organization to distribute methamphetamine, opioids, and other controlled drugs purchased by customers from an online pharmacy.
U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon sentenced Vanessa Vanly Kaiser, 50, to six years’ imprisonment and Ronald Robert Kaiser, 61, to almost four years’ imprisonment after each pled guilty on December 19, 2024, to conspiring to distribute a controlled substance, including methamphetamine. The Kaisers are from Sacramento, California.
For about six months in 2023, the scheme operated as follows: Customers throughout the United States purchased narcotics without prescriptions from an online pharmacy. The foreign drug trafficking organization provided the Kaisers with drugs which were mailed to the organization’s customers throughout the United States (including ones in South Florida). The Kaisers also collected payments on the organization’s behalf. The drugs included Schedule II opioids and pills (appearing to be Adderall) containing methamphetamine. Over the six months, the Kaisers possessed or mailed more than 169,000 pills and funneled more than $500,000 from customers to the foreign drug traffickers using online money transfer applications and bank accounts.
U.S. Attorney Hayden P. O’Byrne for the Southern District of Florida, Special Agent in Charge Deanne L. Reuter of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Miami Field Division (DEA), Acting Special Agent in Charge Brett Skiles of FBI Miami, Acting Special Agent in Charge José R. Figueroa of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Miami, and Acting Inspector in Charge Steven L. Hodges of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS), Miami Division, made the announcement.
DEA Miami Field Division, FBI Miami, HSI Fort Pierce, and USPIS Miami Division investigated the case with assistance from the Food and Drug Administration Office of Criminal Investigation (FDA-OCI), and United States Marshal Service (USMS).
The case was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida.