Drugs and Crime

Coast-to-coast drug kingpin sentenced in Burlington to 12 years

DaJuan Williams mugshot

By Mike Donoghue

BURLINGTON – A part-time Vermont resident, who was the mastermind of a coast-to-coast conspiracy to distribute heroin, fentanyl, methamphetamine, powder cocaine and crack cocaine and to launder drug money, was sentenced to 12 years in prison during a court hearing in Burlington on Thursday afternoon.

DaJuan A. Williams, 31, developed a Chittenden County drug trafficking business that also had additional distribution points in North Dakota, Montana and California that generated him a million-dollar annual enterprise, according to court records.  He boasted on a video played in court that he was a “$6 million man.”

Williams also supervised the laundering of drug proceeds via cash deposits into various bank accounts, officials said.  The proceeds were later transferred using a variety of methods, including mobile payment services such as Venmo, Cash App and Zelle, records show.

 In addition, Williams laundered drug proceeds through the purchase of numerous luxury vehicles, including an Audi, a BMW, and a Maserati.    He also bought clothes, jewelry and houses, officials said.  Williams also maintained stash houses in several towns, including Shelburne, Winooski and Burlington, to hide his drugs. 

At one point Williams and a co-defendant stopped by the Winooski residence to show the associates the cooking process to turn powder cocaine into crack cocaine, records show.

One co-defendant estimated that Williams shipped drugs in suitcases between 35 and 50 times and in one case, another co-defendant took at least 10 outbound trips from California.  The profits were up to “tens of thousands of dollars per day,” records note.

The expansive drug trafficking organization was able to generate astounding profits from the illicit drug trafficking undertaken across the nation.

Chief Federal Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford also ordered more than $600,000 in forfeitures from bank accounts and other property generated from the drug trafficking.

Crawford told Williams he would be under supervised release conditions for four years once he is discharged from prison.

A 12-month investigation led by U.S. Homeland Security Investigations office in Vermont led to an initial 16-count indictment of 8 defendants.  Later another handful of people were added in a subsequent indictment.

Crawford noted in court on Thursday that the drug distribution caused significant devastation in the community.  He noted some people lost lives, some overdosed and others lost homes because of the drugs distributed.

Court records show that Williams would test drugs on customers to determine which product was favored.  Williams would also recruit workers to go to his sites across the country.

One Shelburne apartment was used to store and package drugs for resale with four co-defendants working there, records show.  The renter of the apartment was given drugs for allowing Williams’ associates to operate from there, but he would later die from an overdose, court records show.

“The business relied on a complicated network of logistics to obtain drugs from suppliers, transport them across the country, and distribute them to customers,” former Assistant U.S. Attorney John Boscia said in court papers.

“On the financial side, Williams micro-managed on-the-ground distribution, checking in with his workers and frequently demanding the ‘count’ – an accounting of drugs sold and money earned.  Earnings of over a million dollars were returned to bank accounts controlled by Williams.  The business even had a slogan: working in ‘perfect harmony,'” records

Defense lawyer Chandler Matson of Stowe argued that Williams came from a broken home in Detroit and had been living on the street since he was about 8 years old.  He said Williams never really had a chance in life, but has turned it around since being in prison in pre-trial detention for almost 3 years.

Matson said Williams, who dropped out in first grade, has earned his high school degree and 70 other certificates for programs offered at the Northwest State Correctional Facility. 

Matson maintained that WIlliams did not need a long sentence.

Boscia, who has taken another federal job, was on hand Thursday to argue for an 18-year sentence, which the plea agreement had suggested as a maximum penalty.

Boscia noted the federal sentencing guidelines, which are advisory, had calculated a 60-year prison sentence was appropriate based on the facts of the case and the life Williams led.

Making a rare appearance with Boscia at the prosecutor’s table was U.S. Attorney Nikolas “Kolo” Kerest, who reportedly has applied to fill a vacancy by Crawford’s upcoming retirement.  He offered no comments during the hearing. 

Boscia played a couple of exhibits, including a video showing a woman shooting up in the backseat of a car with Williams.  Boscia also played a sometimes inaudible recording of Williams and his now estranged wife, Victoria Scripps Carmody, formerly of Charlotte.  During the December 2019 phone call, Williams threatened Scripps-Carmody and her family, Boscia said.

About a month later Williams purchased four more vehicles in New York – two BMWs, a Range Rover and a Mercedes, records show.

Boscia wanted the court to have a different impression then the one painted by Matson.

Authorities involved in the investigation are happy that WIlliams will remain off the streets.  He has been detained since his arrest three years ago.  

“DaJuan Williams jeopardized the lives and safety of the Vermont public during his time as one of the area’s most prolific criminals,” according to HSI Resident Agent in Charge Alex Zuchman in South Burlington.

“He wrought havoc on the region and led a drug and money laundering conspiracy that spanned coast-to-coast and included the trafficking of deadly fentanyl,” the veteran agent said.  

“As a result of the detailed and collaborative investigation led by HSI New England and our local, state, and federal law enforcement partners in Vermont, Williams will now spend years facing the consequences of his actions,” Zuchman said.

Williams went to Mexico in January 2020 in an effort to obtain a source of supply for drugs.  He was accompanied by a few associates, including his wife at the time, Victoria Scripps Carmody, records show.

South Burlington Police Chief Shawn Burke, whose department also played a significant role in the investigation along with the Vermont Drug Task Force, was pleased with the prison sentence.

“The court recognized the criminal acts of DaJuan for both the severity and the degree of victimization that he imposed in Vermont,” the chief said.  He noted it would not have been possible without the efforts of HSI.

Burke said Williams had been in the area and it became clear he was involved in organizing various criminal activities and at a significant level.

“I think the sentence is appropriate,” Burke said. 

Also assisting in the investigation were members of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Division, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Drug Enforcement Administration and Burlington Police.

Williams was arrested Jan. 13, 2021 in California at a mansion – his $15,000 a month rental – perched high in the hills of Los Angeles under the famous Hollywood landmark sign, court records show. On the same day, law enforcement agents executed search warrants at a second residence in Los Angeles and a storage locker associated with Williams’s drug trafficking organization. During the searches, agents found a stolen assault rifle and approximately two pounds of methamphetamine.

During simultaneous raid on that day, law enforcement also arrested a second defendant in Los Angeles, two more defendants that day in Vermont, and one each in Gary, Indiana; Owl’s Head, Maine; and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Williams and others under his supervision distributed a variety of controlled substances, including dangerous opiates, as well as highly addictive stimulants such as crack cocaine and methamphetamine. Some of the drugs involved were fentanyl pills created to resemble prescription opiate medications, officials said.

One unnamed defendant, who remains a fugitive, is indicted on a drug conspiracy count that carries a five-year mandatory minimum sentence.

Williams is also known by a variety of aliases, including “D,” “Detroit,” “Big Bro,” “Corn,” and “Sosa.” 

Williams is well-known to federal, state and local law enforcement in the Chittenden County region. 

Williams, while living in Burlington in September 2018, was charged with two counts of unlawful restraint of a pair of women and two counts of simple assault for an incident while visiting a Charlotte house on Greenbush Road known for drug trafficking, state police said. 


Williams, who had four felony convictions on his record at that time, had married Scripps Carmody in June 2018 and he reported in court that she was pregnant, records show.

He kept insisting he had done nothing wrong, despite the eyewitness accounts, records show.

Williams also was linked to a 2017 stabbing in St. Albans, police said.  Williams agreed to pay a group of St. Johnsbury residents with drugs in exchange for a ride back to St. Albans, police said.  A scuffle ensued on Lower Weldon Street and a man was stabbed in the left side of his chest, police said.

Williams fled to Westbrook, Maine, where he was found by police, but he tried to flee.  After a brief foot pursuit, he was cornered by a federal task force and local officers, police said.  Tasers were used because he resisted arrest, police said. 

Besides being wanted on two charges from the stabbing in Franklin County, there were warrants for him in Michigan and Maine on charges of drug trafficking and domestic violence, police said at the time.

He was arrested on three counts of sale of heroin and one each of false information to police and conspiracy in 2015, court records show.  He received a 13-to-29-month sentence.


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14 replies »

  1. just another tourist bringing needed products to vermonters/// look in the mirror///who is at fault///

    • Good point. As Forrest Gump said: “Stupid is as stupid does”.

    • It’s the only business in Vermont that doesn’t need a permit. Violate a zoning permit and you’ll have the full force of state government on your back. Everybody knows where the drug dealers do business and nobody does anything.

      Common knowledge two streets in Bennington have drug dealers, what houses they live in, and nobody can walk those streets safely, more so at night.

      But boy, if somebody opened a gym during covid, we’d shut that up immediately and arrest them!

      See how a democracy works? You have no rights in a democracy. They vote to ignore the rampant drug and alcohol abuse in Vermont….actually they promote it, who are we kidding?

      Too bad we don’t NIMBY drug dealers huh?

  2. Another clearcut case of systemic racism…..or is it “existential” racism…… or something quite like that anyway. In any case, I certainly hope that somehow Sarah George can swoop in & demand that he be credited with 11 years, 11 months, and 27 days, time served. That way all Vermonters can readily note his deep sorrow over his actions, and they can begin to prep him for running for elective office amongst the rest of the criminal minds in Montpelier. Hooray!

  3. This charming young man should be in prison FOR GOOD. A mere 12 years for his misdeeds and the danger he poses to society, is ridiculous.

  4. Thanking Mike Donoghue for a thoroughly comprehensive report, as usual.
    Unbiased, objective investigative reporters like him are a rare and precious commodity.
    Nice try for Williams’ defense team with their cheap attempt at the classic “rough upbringing” defense. It’s nice that he “turned his life around”, found Jesus etc, but is no excuse for the trail of broken lives he left in his wake, most notably his relationship with Vermont resident Victoria Scripps Carmody, which is a soap opera unto itself.
    Good riddance, DaJuan…

  5. Vermont likes its successful capitalist drug-ring leaders and prostitution pimps.

  6. How does a federal judge ACKNOWLEDGE in open court that this man has directly killed people and still not give the MAX 18 years?

    • It’s the politics of where we live…in Moonbatville. The prevailing philosophy is that our society is systemically racist and incarceration is obsolete.

    • John
      I was wondering the same thing. As well as the man he had his associates stab in St. Albans!

    • *Let me make my last comment more clear. It didn’t state he HAD associates stab the man, it was said that…”Williams agreed to pay a group of St. Johnsbury residents with drugs in exchange for a ride back to St. Albans and a scuffle ensued on Lower Weldon Street and a man was stabbed in the left side of his chest.”

  7. bennington and st. albans city /// operation drug trade /// tourists welcome and bring some friends///

    • Bennington as a tourist spot & historic landmark is long gone.
      Bennington flies “pride” rainbow flags along Main Street for the July 4 holiday.
      Bennington sometimes refuses to recite the National Anthem because it’s “offensive”.
      Bennington proudly painted BLM (a POLITICAL organization) on its PUBLIC street.
      Bennington loathes its own police force & demonizes them in every way they can.
      Bennington has droves of empty storefronts but can’t perceive of why.
      Bennington chronically pushes for yet MORE “affordable” housing – despite the precise culture attracted by it are precisely who destroyed small business in town.
      Bennington is so downtrodden at this juncture, SVMC cannot even find much-needed physicians for its hospital.
      Bennington’s Real Estate has plummeted – virtually all of Old Bennington’s residents saw the writing on the wall & vamoosed!
      And Bennington’s select board CLOWNS and its town managers think it’s ALL GRAND!!!!

      Bennington: Enjoy your leftist, warped, perverse dystopia!!!!! You cowardly sell-outs!