NewsCrime & Courts

Actions

Man convicted in Great Falls for meth trafficking

Posted at 12:16 PM, Nov 06, 2020
and last updated 2020-11-06 17:45:11-05

Christopher Michael Stebbins was convicted in federal court in Great Falls on Friday of methamphetamine trafficking crimes, after investigators seized nearly two pounds of meth that were hidden in a pinata and a jar of peanut butter.

U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme said in a news release that after a three-day trial, a jury found Stebbins, 53 years old, guilty of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute meth and with attempted possession with intent to distribute meth.

The prosecution presented evidence that on November 8, 2019, Don Fred Baldwin of California mailed almost two pounds of meth to Stebbins at an address of a residence in Brockton, located on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation. The meth was hidden in a jar of peanut butter and inside a “cop dog” pinata.

Law enforcement officers intercepted the package, obtained a search warrant, and found 1.7 pounds of meth inside the pinata and the peanut butter jar. The quantity of meth seized is the equivalent of about 6,208 doses.

Baldwin was convicted in a companion case of meth distribution and was sentenced in September to six years in prison.

A witness told law enforcement officers that Stebbins received meth from Baldwin and that the shipments were usually one-pound quantities. Baldwin typically shipped the meth to Stebbins’ home in Williston, North Dakota, and that the November 8 package was the only shipment to the Brockton residence. The witness said Stebbins would send Baldwin cash for the drugs, which Baldwin would then send to Stebbins. Stebbins would re-package the meth to sell to others.

“Pinatas are meant to be stuffed with candy, not meth,” Alme said. “Mr. Stebbins worked with others to bring large amounts of this poison to Montana communities, including the Fort Peck Indian Reservation. Organizations that push meth will be broken up, and we will stop their spread. I want to thank Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeff Starnes, the FBI, the U.S. Postal Service and the Merced, CA, Police Department for their work on this case.”

Stebbins faces a minimum of 10 years and up to life in prison, a $10 million fine, and at least five years of supervised release on each crime.

Chief U.S. District Judge Bryan Morris presided, set sentencing for March 4, and ordered Stebbins detained.