Giovanni Antonio Garduno-Garcia, 37, of Mexico, flooded the community with illicit fentanyl and cocaine, targeting vulnerable populations with drug addictions.
An illegal alien who lived a "luxurious" lifestyle has been sentenced to six years in prison for his role in an armed drug trafficking ring that sought out Seattle homeless encampments and targeted the city's Chinatown-International District (CID).
Giovanni Antonio Garduno-Garcia, 37, of Mexico, flooded the community with illicit fentanyl and cocaine, targeting vulnerable populations with drug addictions, the Department of Justice (DOJ) said. He pleaded guilty on March 9 in the US District Court for the Western District of Washington to conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.
Judge Tana told Garduno-Garcia at sentencing, "You were dealing drugs so dangerous that they have resulted in thousands and thousands of deaths across this country...And you were solely motivated by personal profit and greed."

Court records show that 18 defendants have been arrested and charged in this case, which included trafficking cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, and methamphetamine from California into western Washington. The criminal enterprise targeted homeless encampments and Seattle's CID, a high-crime area riddled with open-air drug use.
On May 29, 2025, law enforcement executed a series of search warrants at locations in Federal Way, Vancouver, Everett, Pacific, Tukwila, Kent, Issaquah, Seattle, and Woodlake, all in Washington state. During the search of Garduno-Garcia's residence, officers seized cocaine, fentynal-laced pills, and fentanyl powder, as well as two semi-automatic firearms, magazines, ammunition, body armor, and over $93,000 in cash drug proceeds, according to court documents.
Investigators also seized two vehicles, a Mercedes Benz and a Dodge Durango, which the defendant purchased through drug trafficking activities. The items have been forfeited to the federal government, the DOJ said. In total, investigators seized more than 7 kilograms of cocaine, 18 kilograms of methamphetamine, more than 57,000 fentanyl pills, and 17 firearms, as well as more than $353,000 in cash as a result of the 16 search warrants.


"This defendant trafficked drugs simply for the money," said First Assistant US Attorney Neil Floyd. "He lived in the Seattle suburbs with high end cars, drugs, and $93,000 in cash stashed in his residence. He enjoyed the high life while spreading misery in the form of fentanyl and cocaine to those gripped with addiction. And he did so armed with firearms and body armor. The community will be safer after he serves his sentence and is returned to his home country of Mexico."
Prosecutors noted the damage Garduno-Garcia caused to the community, including the loss of loved ones to addiction, while asking for a 6 year prison sentence. "Garduno-Garcia actively participated in flooding the community with these deadly and addictive substances....And unlike those who are distributing to the community to support their own addiction, Garduno-Garcia distributed solely for financial gain," said Assistant US Attorney Casey Conzatti in a sentencing memorandum, adding that he "admitted that he became involved in drug trafficking for 'quick money.'"
This investigation is part of the Homeland Security Task Force. Robert Saccone, Special Agent in Charge of the DEA Seattle Field Division, said in a press release: "Fentanyl traffickers prey on the most vulnerable members of our communities, valuing profit over human life...Every fentayl seizure, every trafficking network dismantled, and every conviction brings us one step closer to a Fentanyl Free America."
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