It was a big deal when it happened last July, the second 900-pound meth bust of the summer of 2025. It made national news.

The U.S. Attorney for Minnesota issued a press release, under the headline,

Two Men Indicted with Conspiracy to Distribute 900 Pounds of Methamphetamine, One Charged with Illegal Reentry.

Details from the press release,

Joel Casas-Santiago, 46, and Guillermo Mercado-Chaparro, 44, are both charged with one count of Conspiracy to Distribute Methamphetamine. Mercado-Chaparro is additionally charged with Illegal Reentry by a Removed Alien.

Fast forward to 2026. Yesterday, at the federal courthouse in downtown St. Paul, Mercado entered a guilty plea on the meth charge. The illegal immigration charge will likely be dropped at his sentencing.

According to the plea agreement on file, Mercado, a Mexican citizen and an illegal alien, faces a prison term somewhere in the very wide range of 5 to 17 years, with deportation to follow thereafter.

Court records show that Mercado has been deported on two previous occasions.

His accomplice, Casas-Santiago, is scheduled to enter a guilty plea on March 24.

900 pounds of meth sounds like a lot, to me. Securing two felony convictions in a high-profile drug case sounds like it should be considered a real triumph for the U.S. Attorney’s office, said to be crippled by departures and defections in recent months.

But I searched both Bing and Google and could not find a single media story about these convictions.

Perhaps the illegal immigration angle muddies the waters for media outlets. Dealing meth in 900-pound units sounds like “worst of the worst” territory.

To quote the Danny DeVito character in the 1997 movie LA Confidential,

Off the record, on the QT, and very hush-hush





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