Feds arrest felon illegal immigrant after seizing tens of millions in meth stashed in blackberries
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An undocumented immigrant from Mexico, who had previously spent nearly 20 years in federal prison, was indicted on Tuesday. He is accused of plotting to distribute tens of millions of dollars worth of methamphetamine in the Atlanta region. This investigation led authorities to discover nearly 1,600 pounds of the drug concealed within shipments of blackberries.

Gerardo Solorio-Alvarado, 44, hailing from Mexico, faces charges of conspiracy and possession with the intent to distribute methamphetamine.

Solorio-Alvarado had earlier served a 17-year prison sentence following his conviction for felony possession with the intent to distribute methamphetamine and for possessing a firearm in connection with drug trafficking.

Man with facial hair poses for a mug shot.

The announcement of the indictments came on Wednesday in Georgia, where officials displayed the significant quantity of methamphetamine seized in the operation. The news was shared via social media by the FBI’s Atlanta division.

Police surrounded by the seized drugs.

Officials announced the arrests Wednesday in Georgia, showing off a massive amount of methamphetamine.  (@FBIAtlanta via X)

His alleged accomplice, Nelson Enrique Sorto, 36, of Atlanta, is charged with possession with the intent to distribute methamphetamine. He is currently on probation after being convicted in 2024 of felony possession of methamphetamine.

While staking out a cold storage warehouse in Fulton County on Nov. 20, federal agents and Hall County sheriff’s deputies saw three refrigerated box trucks parked outside. 

They followed one of the trucks to a gas station in Gainesville and watched as Solorio-Alvarado picked up the driver and left the abandoned box truck at the gas station, according to officials.

Meth in blackberry boxes.

The drugs were allegedly found in box trucks transporting blackberries, according to officials. (@FBIAtlanta via X)

After a K9 alerted to the odor of narcotics, agents searched the truck and recovered about 661 pounds of methamphetamine hidden among pallets of blackberries. 

Solorio-Alvarado was later arrested while trying to flee out of the back of his Gainesville home, according to authorities. Inside the house, deputies found keys to the abandoned truck.

At the same time, another team of agents followed a second box truck as it traveled in tandem with an SUV, allegedly driven by Sorto, to a home in southeast Atlanta.

The two men arrested were previously convicted of drug-related offenses, according to authorities.

The two men arrested were previously convicted of drug-related offenses, according to authorities. (@FBIAtlanta via X)

Shortly after midnight, Sorto left in the SUV with two passengers and Georgia State Patrol troopers stopped them, finding two guns and several containers of blackberries in the SUV, officials said.

During a subsequent search of the box truck parked outside the Atlanta home, Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents, assisted by the FBI, recovered about 924 pounds of methamphetamine concealed in pallets of blackberries. 

Combined, the two seizures amounted to 1,585 pounds of methamphetamine.

Meth in blackberry boxes.

Officials said the large amount of meth was worth tens of millions of dollars. (@FBIAtlanta via X)

During a news conference on Wednesday, U.S. Attorney Theodore Hertzberg said the two seizures amounted to 1,585 pounds of methamphetamine, worth tens of millions of dollars.

“Solorio-Alvarado was convicted in federal court for drug trafficking and possessing a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking, and he served nearly two decades in federal prison for those offenses. He was then, and he remains, an illegal alien, unlawfully present in the United States,” Hertzberg said. “We’ve seen the cartels operate this way before… we have seen massive methamphetamine seizures of drugs that were smuggled in with cucumbers, celery or jalapeño peppers. And now … blackberries.”

Both men remain in state custody, but will be transferred to the U.S. Marshals Service.

After appearing in federal court, Hertzberg said his office will move for them to be held without bail until their cases have been resolved.

Solorio-Alvarado faces at least 15 years in prison because of his criminal history, and Sorto faces at least 10 years in prison. The maximum sentences are life in prison without parole.

The prosecutions are also part of the Homeland Security Task Force (HSTF) initiative established by President Donald Trump’s Jan. 20 executive order “Protecting the American People Against Invasion.”

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