A 28-year-old Philadelphia man, Asad Sayed, is sentenced to 7½ to 15 years in prison for purchasing firearms for a multi-county gun trafficking organization. This sentence comes after Sayed pleaded guilty to several serious charges, including dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities and selling firearms to ineligible persons. Prosecutors highlighted that Sayed was manipulated by the organization’s leaders, Scott Michael Grondin and Bella Skylar Kenna, who provided him drugs as payment for the guns he purchased.
The gun trafficking network, which extended across Montgomery, Delaware, Chester, and Philadelphia counties, was known for attempting to distribute 17 firearms, with only seven having been recovered. The court revealed that these firearms were often modified to conceal their serial numbers, undermining law enforcement efforts. Grondin and Kenna have since received lengthy prison sentences of 20 to 40 years each for their roles in the organization, raising concerns about the pervasive impact of such operations on community safety.
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