Patrick N. McIlvain was convicted of two money laundering counts and conspiracy to distribute marijuana April 13. He was sentenced earlier this month to 30 months in prison, according to the Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation Division. On the same day, James C. Adams II was sentenced to five years in prison for conspiracy. A third defendant, Rachel H. Ross, received a sentence of 10 months in prison the following week. All are Wasilla residents.
A fourth defendant, David Knutson of Vancouver, British Columbia, is charged as the ringleader and remains a fugitive.
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The Adams house was similarly subject since Adams used the place to grow marijuana after authorities disrupted the distribution ring. Federal authorities say the four people brought the marijuana — a strain called “B.C. bud” — across the border on snowmachines in the winter and in secret compartments of Airstream trailers and inflatable boats in the summer, according to the indictment leveled against the defendants. The sale of the drug netted the Alaska end of the operation about $400 to $500 profit per pound.
The shipments would move across the border in increments of 60 to 150 pounds, periodically between January 2004 and March 2007.
Contact Andrew Wellner at andrew.wellner@frontiersman.com or 352-2270.


Comments
2 comment(s)gail wrote on Aug 30, 2008 7:15 PM:
jk wrote on Aug 27, 2008 5:50 PM:
and crack houses in willow,ak and
houston,ak they are alot worse than
pot smokers and dealers and more
dangerous and do more crime and
injury to society.. personally
i think its they are too chicken
to go after meth labs and crack
houses and the 300,000 to 500,000
or more valued houses these people
buy with meth and crack dealing to
kids as well as adults on top of the
more serious crimes such people are
involved in.... "