Marcus Devonta Williams, 47, of Brookeville, Maryland, was sentenced to 70 months in prison after pleading guilty to a cocaine trafficking conspiracy. Prosecutors described him as the Washington, D.C.-area distributor in a pipeline moving drugs from New York into the region.
The case centered on cocaine sent into Washington, D.C., Maryland, and surrounding areas, then passed to re-sellers and individual buyers. U.S. Attorney Pirro said Williams played a “central role” and profited from activity that moved multi-kilogram quantities of drugs.
The FBI began investigating the cocaine ring in summer 2024, focusing on a route that stretched along the Northeast coast. Court records said the operation moved drugs from New York into Washington, D.C., Maryland, and nearby areas through a regional distribution setup.
Williams was described as the point person for the D.C. area. Prosecutors said he received cocaine from co-defendant Daryl Smith-Winfree, then supplied re-sellers and individual buyers throughout the Washington metropolitan region, giving the network a steady local outlet.
U.S. Attorney Pirro said Williams played a “central role” in a cocaine pipeline moving multi-kilogram quantities from New York into the region. That matters because prosecutors framed him as more than a buyer, rather as a distributor managing local movement.
Between February and April 2025, law enforcement made four controlled purchases from Williams. Those buys mattered because they gave investigators repeated contact points, not just one suspected deal, and helped support the larger claim that Williams was distributing cocaine in the region.
Surveillance also captured Williams meeting Smith-Winfree in a parking lot, where investigators said the two exchanged a brown bag. The next day in Silver Spring, Williams met Tavon Valentine Lee, who entered his vehicle and left with a brown paper bag.
Police later recovered about 257 grams of cocaine and a loaded firearm from Lee’s vehicle. That same day, Williams was stopped with $33,000 in cash, while later searches found cocaine, $31,000, a money counter, and packaging materials.
Williams pleaded guilty on Feb. 4 to one count of conspiracy to distribute 500 grams or more of cocaine. The judge sentenced him to 70 months in prison, five years of supervised release, and ordered him to pay a $150,000 money judgment in the case.
U.S. Attorney Pirro said Williams distributed cocaine to re-sellers throughout the region and profited substantially from the criminal activity. Her statement framed the sentence as punishment for a regional pipeline, not a small street-level transaction or isolated drug sale alone.
Smith-Winfree also pleaded guilty on Jan. 28 to conspiracy to distribute 500 grams or more of cocaine. He received 96 months in prison after authorities said he supplied Williams, including during the same investigation that uncovered cocaine hidden in his vehicle.
The Williams case keeps the debate focused on whether prison time, money judgments, and supervised release can disrupt cocaine pipelines moving from New York into the D.C. region. Prosecutors see accountability as necessary, especially when re-sellers and large cash seizures are involved.
What comes next is continued pressure on suppliers, transport links, and local distributors who move drugs across state lines. Cases like this will likely keep relying on controlled buys, surveillance, vehicle stops, and cash evidence to prove regional trafficking patterns.