Former Big Dig Tunnel Worker Sentenced in Two Federal
Cases for Cocaine Dealing on the Job and Conspiracy to Commit
Armored Car Robbery, Reports U.S. Attorney
BOSTON, Dec. 22 /PRNewswire/ --
BOSTON, Dec. 22 /PRNewswire/ -- A Holbrook man was
sentenced today by two federal judges in connection with
separate convictions -- one for distributing cocaine
while at his Big Dig work site in South Boston and the
second for conspiring to commit an armored car robbery
in 1998.
United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan; Mark R.
Trouville, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Agency in New England; Kenneth W. Kaiser,
Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation in New England; and John McGlynn, Special
Agent in Charge of the New York Regional Office of the
Department of Labor, Office of Labor Racketeering and
Fraud Investigations, announced today that JOHN T.
FIDLER, age 39, of Holbrook, was sentenced by U.S.
District Judge George A. O'Toole, Jr. to 2 years and 3
months in prison, to be followed by 3 years of
supervised release. This sentence follows FIDLER's
January 22, 2004, guilty plea to three counts of
possession with intent to distribute, and distribution
of cocaine.
At the January plea hearing, the prosecutor told the
Court that, had the case proceeded to trial, the
Government's evidence would have proven that, on three
dates during the summer/fall of 2000, FIDLER sold cocaine to a cooperating witness working with
the DEA. On each of those dates, the prosecutor told the Court,
the cooperating witness went to a Big Dig site on the Fort Point
Channel in South Boston, near Summer Street, where FIDLER (a
member of Local Union 88, the Tunnel Workers' Union) was
working. According to the prosecutor, FIDLER met with the
cooperating witness on the site and sold the cooperating witness
cocaine.
In a second sentencing hearing held today, U.S.
District Judge Patti B. Saris sentenced FIDLER to 6
years in prison, to be served concurrently with the
sentence imposed by Judge O'Toole. The sentence was the
result of FIDLER's August 20, 2004, guilty plea to one
count of being a felon in possession of firearms and one
count of conspiracy to affect commerce by robbery.
At the August plea hearing, the prosecutor told the
Court that, had the case proceeded to trial, the
evidence would have proven that in October of 1998,
FIDLER conspired to rob an armored car as it made a
delivery in Medway, Massachusetts. The members of the
group ultimately decided not to commit the robbery on
that date but instead to postpone it to another time.
FIDLER also pleaded guilty to possessing a Plainfield
Machine .30 caliber carbine rifle, a Sturm-Ruger 9 mm
handgun, and a Mossberg 12 gauge shotgun, along with
various rounds of ammunition. At the time he possessed
the firearms, FIDLER was a previously convicted felon.
Federal law prohibits previously convicted felons from
possessing firearms or ammunition.
The cases were investigated by the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the
Department of Labor, Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud
Investigations. The cases were prosecuted by Assistant U.S.
Attorney Rachel E. Hershfang in Sullivan's Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Force Unit and Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert
Richardson in Sullivan's Major Crimes Unit.
U.S. Attorney
CONTACT: Samantha Martin of U.S. Attorney's Office,
+1-617-748-3139 |