{"id":16064,"date":"2017-12-06T01:31:00","date_gmt":"2017-12-06T09:31:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/federal-drug-case-to-go-to-jury-today\/"},"modified":"2017-12-06T01:31:00","modified_gmt":"2017-12-06T09:31:00","slug":"federal-drug-case-to-go-to-jury-today","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/federal-drug-case-to-go-to-jury-today\/","title":{"rendered":"Federal drug case to go to jury today"},"content":{"rendered":"
After four days of witness testimony in a federal case that painted a picture of a drug smuggling ring in Southeast Alaska, the prosecution wrapped up its case Tuesday against the man accused of being the ringleader.<\/p>\n
Zerisenay Gebregiorgis, 35, is facing a federal drug conspiracy charge after the Alaska State Troopers’ Statewide Drug Enforcement Unit arrested him in Ketchikan in August 2016. Gebregiorgis, who also goes by “Sam” and “Bullet,” is from Seattle and was accused of using drug mules to bring heroin and meth to Ketchikan and Sitka.<\/p>\n
The case will go to the jury today, as the two attorneys will deliver their closing arguments starting at 8:30 a.m. The closing arguments will last a maximum of an hour each, Chief U.S. District Judge Timothy M. Burgess said, and then the jury will begin to deliberate.<\/p>\n
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jack Schmidt called a variety of witnesses to the stand since the trial began this past Thursday<\/a>. Law enforcement officials, informants, drug users and people used as mules testified over the course of the trial, many of them identifying Gebregiorgis as the source of meth and heroin that came to the two communities.<\/p>\n Rex Lamont Butler, Gebregiorgis’ attorney, made an argument late in the day when the jury was out of the courtroom that Schmidt hadn’t done a good enough job identifying co-conspirators who were working with Gebregiorgis. Without co-conspirators, Butler told the judge, this situation doesn’t satisfy the definition of a conspiracy (where two or more people knowingly work together to distribute drugs).<\/p>\n