In a story first reported by the Jackson Hole News & Guide, a month-long undercover drug operation in Jackson has led to felony delivery charges against two men accused of selling cocaine and other narcotics during controlled buys set up by Wyoming state agents.
Yes, actual undercover buys, confidential informants, parking lot meetups, and even a brick of cocaine in Idaho. Netflix, take notes.
Two Charged in Jackson
According to JHNG’s reporting, the investigation relied on confidential informants, not undercover officers. In plain English, regular civilians who cooperate with agents, sometimes for cash and sometimes to keep their own legal problems from getting worse. Wyoming’s version of “let’s make a deal.”
The two men charged in the Jackson case are:
- Isaac Jared Hernandez Valente, 24, of Alta
- Charged with three felony counts related to cocaine and methamphetamine deliveries.
- Angel Osvaldo Cisneros Montes, 26, of Jackson
- Charged with two counts of delivering a counterfeit Schedule I or II narcotic and three counts of delivering cocaine.
Wyoming law treats counterfeit narcotics, meaning fake drugs presented as real ones, just as seriously as distributing the real thing. If you pretend you are selling cocaine, the statute says you intended to sell something dangerous, so the penalty is identical. Wyoming does not do participation trophies.
Both men appeared before Circuit Court Judge Erin Weisman on November 7. She set a $50,000 cash-only bond for each. Both remain in jail pending preliminary hearings scheduled for today.
If convicted, each felony delivery count carries up to 20 years in prison and $25,000 in fines. Multiply that across the charges, and the math gets bleak fast.
How the Jackson Investigation Worked
Per the affidavit referenced by JHNG:
- A confidential informant made the first controlled buy on Oct. 1 in the Smith’s parking lot, acquiring 1.7 grams of cocaine, which was the only documented seizure in the Jackson case.
- A second operation on Oct. 23 involved an informant paying 300 dollars for cocaine and 300 dollars for methamphetamine, although the affidavit did not specify drug weights.
- Wyoming DCI Special Agent Garrett Eggener, based in Lincoln County, arrested both men on Nov. 6.
Then Came a Big Idaho Bust
Four days after the Jackson arrests, things got even more dramatic just across Teton Pass.
On Nov. 10, Teton County, Idaho, sheriff’s deputies stopped a rented GMC Yukon on Highway 31 near Pine Creek Pass. What started as a basic “you are following too closely” traffic stop escalated into the discovery of the following.
A brick-shaped package containing 1,132 grams of cocaine, about 2.5 pounds.
That amount is more than six times the 400-gram threshold for Idaho’s highest trafficking tier.
The driver, Alejandro Rene Morales, and the passenger, Ignacio Contreras Chavez, reportedly gave conflicting travel stories. Vegas, Salt Lake City, both, or neither, depending on which version they were telling. Deputies later found the hidden package under a trunk flap.
Both men have been charged with felony cocaine trafficking, which in Idaho carries a potential 10 years to life sentence, along with fines between 25,000 and 100,000 dollars. Magistrate Judge Jason Walker set bail at $150,000 for Morales and $100,000 for Chavez. Both remain held in Jefferson County.
The Bigger Picture
The Jackson and Teton Valley cases overlap only in timing, but together they paint a clear picture. The region’s drug trafficking activity has not taken a holiday.
Two undercover-informant busts in Jackson in a month. A multi-pound cocaine seizure on the Idaho side. Coordinated state agents, multiple judges, and a rental Yukon full of contradictions. It has been a week.
We will continue monitoring court updates in both states. And again, credit to the Jackson Hole News & Guide for first reporting the details.
Please don’t let one of the Democratic appointed judges that on these cases. We want these kind of people behind bars for the maximum length of time, not let off free and supported like California and New York State judges do.