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GRAND FORKS — A Grand Forks man was sentenced Monday, April 13, to serve 10 years for methamphetamine, fentanyl, marijuana and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) crimes.
Cameron Shane Anderson, 26, pleaded guilty to four felony offenses: Class A felony possession of at least 50 grams of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, Class B felony fentanyl possession with intent to deliver, Class C felony marijuana possession with intent and Class C felony THC possession with intent.
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The Class A felony has a maximum 20-year sentence. Anderson was sentenced to the maximum, though he was ordered to first serve 10 years and has credit for 180 days.
Anderson will be on supervised probation for three years after his release. If he violates any conditions of probation, he will be at risk of returning to imprisonment for 10 years.
Law enforcement pulled Anderson over on Oct. 15 after learning he was driving with a suspended license, according to a declaration of probable cause summary filed in the case.
A probation search on his vehicle revealed 43 THC carts, one pound and 2.8 ounces of marijuana, three ounces of methamphetamine, .3 ounces of fentanyl and various drug paraphernalia such as burnt tinfoil, designer baggies, a ledger, marijuana grinder and digital scale. These items, as well as $1,457 in cash, were seized, according to the summary.
Anderson claimed the items were his, and he had “traded points of fentanyl with friends in the past,” but law enforcement suspected drug dealing based on the ledger and the amount of drugs and cash Anderson had with him.
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