Asheville: Leader Of Methamphetamine Trafficking Ring Is Sentenced To 12.5 Years
ASHEVILLE, N.C. –Department of Justice Western District of North Carolina U.S. Attorney’s Office FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Thursday, May 14, 2020
U.S. Attorney Andrew Murray announced today that the leader of a methamphetamine trafficking ring was sentenced to 151 months in prison on drug charges. In addition to the prison term imposed, U.S. District Judge Martin Reidinger also ordered Michael McCray Sykes, 34, of Clyde, N.C., to serve five years under court supervision after he is released from prison.
According to filed court documents and today’s sentencing hearing, from February 2018, to April 6, 2018, Sykes distributed and transported large amounts of methamphetamine into Haywood and Jackson Counties and elsewhere. Court documents show that Sykes made trips to purchase methamphetamine from a supply source located in Georgia, and transported the drugs back to Western North Carolina. From at least April 5, 2018, to April 6, 2018, Sykes and his two co-defendants, Savanah Pauline Justice and Bradford Junior Ledford, operated as a drug conspiracy that transported a large quantity of methamphetamine into Western North Carolina for distribution.
According to court records, on April 6, 2018, Sykes and his two co-conspirators were driving back to North Carolina in two separate vehicles, after purchasing a large quantity of methamphetamine from their supplier in Georgia. Sykes and Ledford were in one vehicle and Justice was in the second one. As filed documents show, law enforcement conducted a traffic stop of both vehicles, and recovered just under two pounds of methamphetamine from beneath the driver’s seat of the vehicle Justice was driving. As Sykes previously admitted in court documents, the co-conspirators had purchased the methamphetamine in Georgia and intended to bring it back to Western North Carolina to distribute it locally.
On December 23, 2019, Sykes pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine, and possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. He is currently in federal custody. Justice and Ledford have pleaded guilty to drug charges and are currently awaiting sentencing.
In making today’s announcement, U.S. Attorney Murray thanked the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the North Carolina Highway Patrol; the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office, the Swain County Sheriff’s Office, the Haywood County Sheriff’s Office, and the Waynesville Police Department for work in this case. He also thanked District Attorney Ashley Welch for her office’s coordination over the course of the investigation and prosecution of this case.
Special Assistant United States Attorney (SAUSA) Alexis Solheim is prosecuting the case. Ms. Solheim is a state prosecutor with the office of the 30th Prosecutorial District, and was assigned by District Attorney Ashley Welch to serve as SAUSA with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Asheville. Ms. Solheim is duly sworn in both state and federal courts. The SAUSA position is a reflection of the partnership between the office of the 30th Prosecutorial District and the United States Attorney’s Office. The SAUSA position helps ensure the effective and vigorous prosecution of federal court cases that impact the counties within the 30th Prosecutorial District.