DHAR LAW LLP | FEDERAL CRIMINAL DEFENSE
BOSTON | SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK | WASHINGTON DC FEDERAL COURTS NATIONWIDE
FEDERAL CRIMINAL DEFENSE | MAY 18, 2026
BREAKING: DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS / WORCESTER BRANCH
A sweeping federal indictment out of Gardner, Massachusetts names eighteen defendants across seven states. Here is what they are facing, and what experienced federal defense counsel can do about it.
A federal grand jury indictment is not a conviction. It is a moment, a critical and irreversible one, where the decisions made in the next seventy-two hours can determine the entire trajectory of a case.
On May 18, 2026, the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts announced the arrest of eighteen individuals across Massachusetts, New Jersey, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, California, and Hawaii in connection with an alleged drug trafficking and money laundering organization based in North Worcester County.
According to the charging documents, the alleged conspiracy stretched nationwide from Gardner to Honolulu, involving cocaine, marijuana, counterfeit pills, and a commercial painting company allegedly used to launder drug proceeds through the financial system.
The lead defendant, Hai Son Pham of Gardner, is alleged to have headed the trafficking organization, with co-conspirators distributing controlled substances across at least eight states. The money laundering component centers on Infinite Painting, a commercial and residential painting company prosecutors allege was used to conceal the source of illegal proceeds through multiple financial institutions.
Federal prosecutors, the DEA, and IRS Criminal Investigation are all involved. That combination of narcotics charges, money laundering, and financial crimes enforcement signals a case built over time with significant investigative resources behind it.
What the Charging Documents Actually Say
All eighteen defendants are currently charged with conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute controlled substances. Several face an additional money laundering conspiracy count.
These are serious federal charges with serious federal consequences. Charges are not evidence, and evidence is not a verdict.
Statutory Exposure Under Current Charges
- Drug Conspiracy: Up to 20 years in federal prison; minimum 3 years supervised release (up to life); fine up to $1,000,000.
- Money Laundering Conspiracy: Up to 20 years in federal prison; 3 years supervised release; fine up to $500,000 or twice the transaction amount, whichever is greater.
- Sentences are imposed under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines. The actual range depends on drug quantity, criminal history, and a range of mitigating and aggravating factors.
- Early retention of experienced federal counsel directly affects plea positioning, guideline calculations, and ultimate sentencing outcomes.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Danial Bennett out of the Worcester Branch Office.
The investigation involved the DEA New England Field Division, IRS Criminal Investigation, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, Massachusetts State Police, Worcester County Sheriff, and more than a dozen local police departments across Central Massachusetts. The breadth of law enforcement involvement reflects months, likely years, of coordinated investigation.
The Geography of This Indictment
Defendants were arrested in federal courts in Worcester, Trenton, Orlando, Dallas, Tulsa, Riverside, and Honolulu. That geographic spread matters. Each defendant is navigating a different local federal court while facing charges that will ultimately be prosecuted in Massachusetts.
Coordinating a coherent defense strategy across those jurisdictions requires counsel who understands both the local dynamics and the broader federal criminal framework.
Defendants Named in the Charging Documents
- Hai Son Pham – Gardner, MA
- Kelly Breault – Leominster, MA
- Boonphet Sysoumang – Gardner, MA
- Rafael Moreno – Leominster, MA
- Andres Montemayor – Arlington, TX
- James Jah – South River, NJ
- Cesar Gonzalez – Rancho Mirage, CA
- Courtney Spaulding – Leominster, MA
- Abdeem Griffin – Vallejo, CA
- Rhonda Reed – Winchendon, MA
- Fong Yang – Claremore, OK
- Kenneth Godfrey – Phillipston, MA
- Scorpio Ramos – Fitchburg, MA
- Giovan Colon – Kissimmee, FL
- Gary Boucher – Shirley, MA
- David Vega – Fitchburg, MA
- Frederick Hrdy – Honolulu, HI
- Jose Garcia – Chicopee, MA
The Money Laundering Layer Is Significant
Drug trafficking charges are serious. When money laundering is added on top, especially through an alleged business entity like Infinite Painting, the complexity of the defense multiplies.
Federal prosecutors at the District of Massachusetts have extensive experience prosecuting business-based money laundering schemes. The IRS Criminal Investigation’s involvement confirms that financial records, tax filings, bank statements, and business transactions have been under scrutiny. Any defense must address not just the narcotics allegations but the full financial architecture prosecutors claim they have documented.
It also means that defendants who had any business or financial relationship with Infinite Painting, even a peripheral one, need counsel who understands federal financial crimes as well as drug law.
Federal drug cases of this scale are won or lost before the first suppression hearing. The moment the government unseals an indictment, the clock starts. Every day without experienced counsel is a day the prosecution is shaping the narrative uncontested.”
— VIKAS S. DHAR, DHAR LAW LLP
What Experienced Federal Defense Counsel Does Right Now
The immediate priority in any federal case of this magnitude is understanding the full scope of the government’s evidence. That means obtaining and reviewing discovery as early as possible, assessing whether law enforcement’s investigative methods were constitutionally sound, and identifying where the prosecution’s theory is weakest.
In a conspiracy case involving eighteen defendants, the government’s strategy often depends on cooperation: turning lower-level participants into witnesses against those higher in the alleged hierarchy. Where a defendant sits in that hierarchy, and how the government has characterized that role in the charging documents, determines everything that follows. It determines guideline calculations. It determines plea leverage. It determines whether there is a viable trial defense.
None of those assessments can be made competently without counsel who has litigated federal narcotics and money laundering cases at the District of Massachusetts level, before federal judges who apply the Sentencing Guidelines in ways that reward thorough preparation.
In a conspiracy this large, the government is counting on defendants not knowing their options. Our job from day one is to make sure our client understands exactly where they stand, what the realistic outcomes are, and how to position themselves for the best possible result—whether that means fighting the case or negotiating one.
— PAUL J. ANDREWS, DHAR LAW LLP
The Sentencing Guidelines: Why They Matter Now, Not Later
Federal sentencing in drug cases is driven heavily by drug quantity. But quantity is not the only variable. Safety valve eligibility, zero-point offender status, acceptance of responsibility, the degree of a defendant’s participation in the alleged conspiracy, and the strength of mitigation evidence all affect where a sentence lands on the guideline range and whether a judge is persuaded to vary downward from it.
In the District of Massachusetts, federal judges bring distinct philosophies to sentencing. Understanding those philosophies and building a sentencing strategy around them early is not premature. It is essential. The sentencing memo filed on a defendant’s behalf in a case like this is the last, best opportunity to present that person as a complete human being and not just a name on an indictment.
Conspiracy charges often sweep in people whose actual conduct was far more limited than the government’s charging documents suggest. The job of defense counsel is to make sure that distinction is front and center at every stage of the proceedings, from arraignment through sentencing.
— THOMAS F.X. DUNN, DHAR LAW LLP
Why Dhar Law LLP
Dhar Law LLP is a Boston-based federal criminal defense firm with more than 100 combined years of experience across eight attorneys. The practice is built around federal criminal defense: white-collar cases, narcotics conspiracies, money laundering, and the intersection of all three.
Vikas S. Dhar has been recognized as a Boston Magazine Super Lawyer in white-collar criminal defense every year from 2008 through 2026. The firm has represented clients in the District of Massachusetts, the First Circuit, and in federal courts nationwide.
We have handled cases that began exactly like this one: a multi-defendant indictment, significant law enforcement resources arrayed against our client, and facts that looked bleak on paper. The difference between a just outcome and a devastating one is almost always the same thing: the quality of counsel, and when that counsel gets involved.
Eighteen defendants. Seven states. One indictment. Each of those eighteen people deserves to know what their options actually are – not what the government wants them to believe their options are. That’s what we do.”
— VIKAS S. DHAR, DHAR LAW LLP
Facing Federal Charges? Call Us Today.
If you or a family member has been named in this indictment, time is not on your side. The federal system moves quickly. Cooperation timelines, plea windows, and the government’s ongoing investigation all create pressure that works against defendants who wait.
The first conversation with us is confidential and carries no obligation. But it may be the most important call you make.
Our attorneys are available to speak with defendants named in this matter and their families. All consultations are confidential and protected by attorney-client privilege. Call (617) 880-6155 or contact us here today.
Disclaimer: This blog post is published for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The details summarized above are drawn from the government’s charging documents. All defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this post. Contact Dhar Law LLP directly to discuss your specific situation.




