Berkeley post office workers sentenced in cannabis package theft scam

Two former clerks have been sentenced to probation in a scheme to steal packages of cannabis and sell the contents. A third person charged in the case is scheduled for sentencing next month.

Update, July 18, 2023:

Two former U.S. Postal Service clerks who worked at the West Berkeley post office have been sentenced for their roles in a scheme to steal packages of cannabis out of the mail. A third defendant is scheduled for sentencing in August.

All three defendants entered into plea agreements with federal prosecutors. They were first indicted in July 2023, accused of stealing the packages — rather than simply confiscating them, as it is illegal to mail cannabis — and selling the marijuana on their own.

In her plea agreement, Gloria E. Navarro admitted to one count of conspiracy to commit mail theft. U.S. District Judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín sentenced Navarro Monday to two years  probation and 50 hours of community service, according to court records. Another charge of mail theft was dismissed.

Navarro was shoehorned into a new position at the post office “for which she was never trained,” a position where she had to work 12-hour shifts “with no breaks or days off because of chronic understaffing,” according to a sentencing memo by her federal public defenders.

With Navarro already stressed and anxious because of the new position, “After the COVID-19 virus struck, her mental health issues only magnified, along with a growing sense of isolation,” according to the memo. “At this point, Ms. Navarro should have sought mental health treatment or quit her job. Instead, she committed the offense and will now be sentenced. Ms. Navarro accepts responsibility and is filled with regret and embarrassment.”

Martínez-Olguín gave a second defendant, Jessica K. Pardo-Alvarez, an identical sentence July 8. Pardo-Alvarez also pleaded guilty to conspiracy, and had a count of mail theft dismissed.

Pardo-Alvarez’s part in the scheme was “a terrible lapse of judgment during a very stressful period in what has been a challenging, but otherwise law-abiding, life,” according to a sentencing memo from Pardo-Alvarez’s attorney, Sean P.J. Coyle of the San Francisco firm Coblentz, Patch, Duffy and Bass LLP. Pardo-Alvarez had gone into a “temporary tailspin” on account of severe stresses in her family life, according to the memo, but she “accepts full responsibility for her actions.”

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Berkeley post office workers sentenced in cannabis package theft scam

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