17 People Charged with 125 Crimes for Drug Trafficking and Weapons Possession in Upstate New York Investigation Seized More Than 23 Pounds of Fentanyl, 12 Pounds of Methamphetamine, and Nearly Four Pounds of Cocaine, As Well As Guns and $880,000 in CashNew York Attorney General Letitia James today announced the indictment of 17 people for their roles in a major drug trafficking network that distributed fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine in Onondaga, Oneida, Madison, Cortland, and Tompkins counties. An investigation led by the Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG) Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF) seized more than 23 pounds of fentanyl worth more than $625,000 - OCTF’s largest single seizure of fentanyl powder, nearly four pounds of cocaine worth more than $125,000, and more than 12 pounds of methamphetamine worth more than $32,000. 23 pounds of fentanyl is enough to kill one New Yorker every six seconds for an entire year. The investigation also seized more than $880,000 in cash tied to the drug trafficking, as well as three illegal firearms, and two vehicles used to transport and distribute the drugs. The indictment unsealed today in Onondaga County Court charges the 17 defendants with 125 crimes.
“Traffickers who flood our communities with fentanyl and other drugs are threatening the important progress New York has made in reducing overdoses and fighting the opioid crisis,” said Attorney General James. “Thanks to the hard work of this investigation and our law enforcement partners, we took more than five million deadly doses of fentanyl off our streets. I will continue to use every resource at my disposal to put an end to these destructive drug trafficking rings and keep New Yorkers safe from dangerous narcotics.”
The investigation spanned September 2024 through May 2025 and uncovered a drug trafficking ring centered around Jaquan Jones, a/k/a “Flame,” that distributed fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine to customers throughout Central New York. Jones bought significant quantities of fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine from Antonio Sanchez and others, and supplied drugs to a large network of dealers. These dealers included Etiem Berrios, Ronnie Evanciew, Tyler Forshee, Joshua Goyette, Gary Jordan, Cody Lane, Nicole Lighthall, Autumn Schneider, Heather Sharpsteen, Joshua Stimpson, Zachary Thornhill, and Amanda Valenti.
Jones would arrange sales over text message, telling his customers to meet at a common location where he would then arrive and sell to them all at once. The defendants used codewords to refer to the narcotics they were selling. “Soft” referred to cocaine, “fet” or “fetty” referred to fentanyl, and “ice” referred to methamphetamine. Jones’ customers then sold to their own customers throughout the region. Jones is charged with Operating as a Major Trafficker, which carries a mandatory life sentence in state prison.
The investigation recovered approximately 22 pounds of fentanyl and 12 ounces of cocaine that Jones was storing in a garage attached to a house in Syracuse. A search of an apartment rented by Sanchez in Onondaga County led to the seizure of fentanyl mixed with heroin and ketamine, along with scales, glassines, and cutting agents.
New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced the indictment of 17 people for their roles in a major drug trafficking network that distributed fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine in Onondaga, Oneida, Madison, Cortland, and Tompkins counties. An investigation led by the Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG) Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF) seized more than 23 pounds of fentanyl worth more than $625,000 - OCTF’s largest single seizure of fentanyl powder, nearly four pounds of cocaine worth more than $125,000, and more than 12 pounds of methamphetamine worth more than $32,000. 23 pounds of fentanyl is enough to kill one New Yorker every six seconds for an entire year. The investigation also seized more than $880,000 in cash tied to the drug trafficking, as well as three illegal firearms, and two vehicles used to transport and distribute the drugs. The indictment unsealed today in Onondaga County Court charges the 17 defendants with 125 crimes.
“Traffickers who flood our communities with fentanyl and other drugs are threatening the important progress New York has made in reducing overdoses and fighting the opioid crisis,” said Attorney General James. “Thanks to the hard work of this investigation and our law enforcement partners, we took more than five million deadly doses of fentanyl off our streets. I will continue to use every resource at my disposal to put an end to these destructive drug trafficking rings and keep New Yorkers safe from dangerous narcotics.”
The investigation spanned September 2024 through May 2025 and uncovered a drug trafficking ring centered around Jaquan Jones, a/k/a “Flame,” that distributed fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine to customers throughout Central New York. Jones bought significant quantities of fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine from Antonio Sanchez and others, and supplied drugs to a large network of dealers. These dealers included Etiem Berrios, Ronnie Evanciew, Tyler Forshee, Joshua Goyette, Gary Jordan, Cody Lane, Nicole Lighthall, Autumn Schneider, Heather Sharpsteen, Joshua Stimpson, Zachary Thornhill, and Amanda Valenti.
Jones would arrange sales over text message, telling his customers to meet at a common location where he would then arrive and sell to them all at once. The defendants used codewords to refer to the narcotics they were selling. “Soft” referred to cocaine, “fet” or “fetty” referred to fentanyl, and “ice” referred to methamphetamine. Jones’ customers then sold to their own customers throughout the region. Jones is charged with Operating as a Major Trafficker, which carries a mandatory life sentence in state prison.
The investigation recovered approximately 22 pounds of fentanyl and 12 ounces of cocaine that Jones was storing in a garage attached to a house in Syracuse. A search of an apartment rented by Sanchez in Onondaga County led to the seizure of fentanyl mixed with heroin and ketamine, along with scales, glassines, and cutting agents.





The 17 individuals who were charged in relation to their involvement in the narcotics trafficking operation, including various counts of Criminal Sale and Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance (class A, B, and C felonies), and/or Conspiracy to commit those crimes, include:
- Etiem M. Berrios, 45 years old, of Syracuse, NY
- Chase Cahoon, 39 years old, of Rome, NY
- Cory M. Ching, 32 years old, of Poland, NY
- Ronnie R. Evanciew, 29 years old, of Taberg, NY
- Tyler J. Forshee, 30 years old, of Cortland, NY
- Joshua B. Goyette, 47 years old, of Freeville, NY
- Jaquan T. Jones, a/k/a “Flame”, 31 years old, of Syracuse, NY
- Gary M. Jordan, 53 years old, of Rome, NY
- Cody E. Lane, 29 years old, of Rome, NY
- Nicole E. Lighthall, 29 years old, of Forestport, NY
- Alexander Medina, 24 years old, of Syracuse, NY
- Antonio Sanchez, 37 years old, of New Rochelle, NY
- Autumn R. Schneider, 28 years old, of Bridgeport, NY
- Heather R. Sharpsteen, 39 years old, of Groton, NY
- Joshua J. Stimpson, 29 years old, of Bridgeport, NY
- Zachary M. Thornhill, 36 years old, of Liverpool, NY
- Amanda L. Valenti, 41 years old, of Genoa, NY
This takedown marks another major drug bust in OAG’s Suburban and Upstate Response to the Growing Epidemic (S.U.R.G.E.) Initiative, a law enforcement effort that brings together state and local law enforcement to target New York’s growing heroin, fentanyl, opioid, and narcotics trafficking networks. Since launching in 2017, SURGE has taken 1,008 alleged traffickers off the streets.
The charges against the defendants are merely accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.
The investigation was led by OAG OCTF Detective Toby Lindfield, under the supervision of OCTF Assistant Chief Investigator John Monte and Deputy Chief Investigator Andrew Boss. The OAG’s Investigations Division is led by Chief Oliver Pu-Folkes.
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