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View Full Version : Ex-Mr. Ohio final steroid ring member sentenced



beanlicker
11-09-2012, 02:33 AM
Posted: 6:21 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012

By Denise G. Callahan LEBANON —

All of the players in the Warren County steroid ring dubbed “Operation Bulk-Up” have now been adjudicated.

Drew Smith, a former body-building champion who was crowned Mr. Ohio in 2009, was sentenced to 60 days in jail Wednesday by Judge Robert Peeler. He was the last of 29 defendants to be sentenced after the two-year sting operation ended a year ago.

Smith was indicted on 18 counts of drug trafficking and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. He pleaded guilty to eight of the trafficking charges and the corrupt activity count in September.
The Warren County Drug Task Force originally rounded up 32 people who were connected to the steroid trafficking operation.

In all, two people went to trial, 25 pleaded guilty, one man’s case was dismissed and he was tried in Hamilton County, and one man is dead, according to Assistant Prosecutor Andy Sievers.
Sievers said some original defendants cooperated with the investigation so their cases were dismissed. All tolled, 13 people will serve a total of 41 years in prison, others spent some time in the county jail and a few were given probation or intervention in lieu of conviction.

Smith, 29, of Germantown, was not the kingpin of the operation. He came into the picture while police and prosecutors were investigating the cases, Sievers said. The main target for the drug task force was Ronald Herbort, 46, of Amelia.
Herbort was importing the drugs from China, cutting them with olive oil to make them injectable and then turned them over to Matthew Geraci for sale, according to Warren County Drug Task Force Commander John Burke.

The investigation started with a tip that people were selling steroids to high school athletes out of the Countryside YMCA in Lebanon. An undercover officer also bought drugs from a member of the Urban Active facility in Deerfield Twp. Both the Y and the fitness center said their employees were not involved in the network and they had no knowledge of the activities.

The Task Force sent an undercover agent into the YMCA and that person infiltrated the operation all the way up to its highest level, Burke said.
“We got ourselves involved in a much bigger operation that encompassed Clermont, Hamilton and Warren counties,” he said. “There was a very organized business, I would say, where they had meetings and talked about profits and losses and how they can sell more product. It was kind of like you would have at a legitimate business.”

The investigation led them to Herbort, who was operating out of a double-wide trailer in Manchester, Tenn. Herbort pleaded guilty earlier this year and was sentenced to five years in prison.

Steroid ring cases
Name Age Residence Sentence
Ronald Herbort, 46, Amelia – 5 years prison
Matthew Geraci , 38, Cincinnati – 3 years prison
Jessica Howard, 28, Cincinnati – 5 years prison
Jason Sherrill, 31, Tullahoma, TN – 5 years prison
Kenneth Freeman, 44, Manchester, TN – 4 years prison
Michael Lee, 44, Miamisburg - 4 years prison
Tim Mielke, 33, Cincinnati - 3 years and 9 months prison
Kris Scheid, 33, Hamilton – 3 years prison
Stephanie Sherrill, 27, Tullahoma, TN – 2 years prison
Michael Dorazio, 49, Maineville – 2 years prison
Richard Blevins, 34, Maineville – 2 years prison
Chad Taylor, 37, Cincinnati – 2 years prison
Tina Reifenberger, 27, Middletown – 1 year prison
Drew Smith, 29, Germantown – 60 days in jail
Cory McIntosh, 29, Lebanon – 60 days jail; 60 days house arrest
Joshua Haberstroh, 38, Mason – 30 days jail
Brian Robinson, 37, Cincinnati – 30 days house arrest
Brett Peterson, 24, Cincinnati – 10 days jail
Ryan Segerberg, 32, Cincinnati – 10 days jail
Joseph Lochard, 38, Hamilton – 3 years probation
Matt Donohoe, 25, Coldspring, Ky. – 3 years probation
Jerod Turner, 30, Wilmington – 3 years probation
Daniel Lovejoy, 43, Lebanon – 3 years probation
Phillip Payton, 24, Waynesville - Intervention in lieu of conviction
Tony Kaiser, 36, Cincinnati – Intervention in lieu of conviction
Bret Hebenstreit, 36, Cincinnati – Intervention in lieu of conviction
Jordan Dyer, 34, Oregonia – Intervention in lieu of conviction
Rick Cantrell, 42, Cincinnati – case dismissed – prosecuted in Hamilton County
Charlie Godsey, Lebanon – deceased

Dath
11-09-2012, 04:04 AM
Damn that's a long list,....what disappoints me the most is the part in there about high school being sold to, WTF THERE'S A THING CALLED MORAL VALUES.

beanlicker
11-09-2012, 04:09 PM
Agrred!....no morals there...just greed!

PAiN
11-09-2012, 04:22 PM
Another bunch of fuck ups that make us all look bad.

alpha405
01-04-2013, 11:29 PM
selling out of the local ymca to highschool kids? douche bags....they got what they deserved

fonz
01-05-2013, 05:37 AM
selling out of the local ymca to highschool kids? douche bags....they got what they deserved

thats messed up.

gator-mclusky
01-05-2013, 05:53 AM
I know a few that have been busted. All got probation.

gator

jinko
01-05-2013, 12:29 PM
I will never understand what the issue is with AAS.

AryanSteel
01-06-2013, 07:41 PM
They really got off pretty easy considering the charges, 5 yrs for the kingpin aint much time

pushiron
01-06-2013, 09:19 PM
I will never understand what the issue is with AAS.

Its fucking ILLEGAL!!!! What don't you get?? Its legal with a prescription from the DEA, OTHER THAN THAT BAM!! Schedule 3 Controlled Substance!!

jinko
01-06-2013, 09:40 PM
Its fucking ILLEGAL!!!! What don't you get?? Its legal with a prescription from the DEA, OTHER THAN THAT BAM!! Schedule 3 Controlled Substance!!


Really??? Thanks for clearing that up. Issue as in why people care, why is it illegal.

buckeye
01-06-2013, 10:32 PM
Damn man another one bites the dust.