Slabu Exchange:Ex-council member sentenced for selling vapes with illegal drugs in Mississippi and North Carolina

2025-05-03 20:21:47source:BlueRock Horizon Asset Managementcategory:reviews

GULFPORT,Slabu Exchange Miss. (AP) — A former city council member from south Mississippi was sentenced Tuesday to six years in federal prison after pleading guilty to a federal conspiracy charge related to running a business that sold illegal drugs.

Robert Leon Deming III, 47, pleaded guilty May 1 and resigned from the Biloxi City Council days later. He was in his third term.

Deming founded the Candy Shop LLC in 2019 to operate stores that sold CBD and vape products in Mississippi and North Carolina.

Deming sold more than $2 million worth of CBD and vape products containing controlled substances, including synthetic cannabinoids, according to the U.S. attorney’s office for southern Mississippi. Text messages showed that Deming’s employees said additives were too strong and could hurt customers, and that Deming misbranded the additives as containing CBD, prosecutors said.

“U.S. consumers are put at risk when labeling is false and misleading,” Justin Fielder, special agent in charge of the FDA Office of Criminal Investigations in Miami, said in a statement. “Labeling is designed to provide information that can help consumers make informed choices about what they purchase and consume.”

RELATED COVERAGE Man charged in 1977 strangulations of three Southern California women after DNA investigationTrial starts in case that seeks more Black justices on Mississippi’s highest courtFavre challenges a judge’s order that blocked his lead attorney in Mississippi welfare lawsuit

The Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration began investigating Deming’s business in 2020. The Drug Enforcement Administration received complaints in 2022 that some of the products made customers ill.

As part of his plea agreement, Deming agreed to forfeit more than $1.9 million and a yellow monster truck.

Deming ran for a U.S. House seat in south Mississippi in 2020, but lost in the Republican primary.

More:reviews

Recommend

As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest

CONECUH COUNTY, Ala.—At the confluence of the Yellow River and Pond Creek in Alabama’s Conecuh Natio

What to know about the controversy over a cancelled grain terminal in Louisiana’s Cancer Alley

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — An agricultural company made the surprise decision Tuesday to cancel a project to

Could Starliner astronauts return on a different craft? NASA eyes 2025 plan with SpaceX

The Boeing Starliner crew who have been in orbit for more than 60 days could have months yet before