Sioux Falls, South Dakota Woman Sentenced to 20 Years in Federal Prison for Distribution of a Controlled Substance Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

United States Attorney Ron Parsons announced today that Chief Judge Roberto A. Lange, U.S. District Court, has sentenced a Sioux Falls, South Dakota, woman convicted of Distribution of a Controlled Substance Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury.  The sentencing took place on March 16, 2026.

Federal Trial Jury Convicts New Orleans Personal Injury Attorneys in Staged Collision Scheme

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA — The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice announced that on Friday, March 20, 2026, VANESSA MOTTA (“MOTTA”), age 44, and JASON F. GILES (“GILES”), age 47, were found guilty of all charges pending against them, following a three-week jury trial presided over by Chief U.S. District Judge Wendy B. Vitter. The jury also convicted law firms MOTTA LAW LLC and THE KING FIRM LLC and co-conspirator DIAMANIKE F. STALBERT (“STALBERT”), age 35. 

Suspected Bloods members arrested on drug and gun charges

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Ronnie Powell, 40, and Daniqua S. Dixon, 34, both of Buffalo, NY, were arrested and charged by criminal complaint with possession with intent to distribute cocaine, crack cocaine, fentanyl, and methamphetamine, and possession of a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking activity. The charges carry a mandatory minimum penalty of five years in prison and a maximum of life. 

District of Arizona Charges 185 Individuals for Immigration-Related Criminal Conduct this Week

Source: United States Department of Justice Criminal Division

PHOENIX, Ariz. – During the week of enforcement operations from March 14 through March 20, 2026, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona brought immigration-related criminal charges against 185 individuals. Specifically, the United States filed 108 cases in which aliens illegally re-entered the United States, and the United States also charged 53 aliens for illegally entering the United States. In its ongoing effort to deter unlawful immigration, the United States filed 20 cases against 24 individuals responsible for smuggling illegal aliens into and within the District of Arizona.

Defense News: 21st Theater Sustainment Command Supports 2026 AER Campaign

Source: United States Army

KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany – The Army Emergency Relief (AER) program is conducting their 2026 annual campaign. Which began on March 1, 2026 and concludes June 14, 2026, on the Army’s birthday.

The purpose of AER’s campaign is to raise funds for AER. AER provides support to Soldiers and their families during times of financial hardship for critical needs such as rent, utilities, and medical.

This year’s campaign is broken into two goals for the Rhienland-Pfalz region. The campaign’s primary goal is to raise 100 percent awareness of the campaign and the assistance the AER program offers to Soldiers in the region. The secondary goal is to achieve 20 percent of active-duty Soldiers donating to the campaign.

The 21st Theater Sustainment Command has set the lofty goal of raising $210,000 for this year’s campaign, which equals roughly 10 percent of the entire Army’s donations last year.

A main function of AER is the issuance of zero-interest loans. According to Jessee Dean, the AER U.S. Army Garrison Rheinland-Pfalz program director, the loans may be used for utilities, rent, car payments, insurance, and similar needs. Assistance with personal loans, credit cards, legal fees, or taxes are not authorized in the program.

A secondary function of AER is the issuance of grants. The grant program may be used by Soldiers and immediate family for grants of up to $4,000. Additionally, AER can assist with certain expenses that go beyond the $4000 cap like rental cars, hotels, food, and fuel during events like PCS, emergency travel or funeral expenses. In instances like this it can be a combination of a grant and no-interest loan.

According to Dean, running the program is not just another job, he has an emotional tie to its success. “I’ve personally used AER twice. One time I owed €3,000 in gas and €1,500 in electricity due to billing issues,” said Dean. “I had to pay it quickly, and AER helped cover that.”

AER is completely donation driven and not government funded. Rheinland-Pfalz was heavily supported by AER throughout last year.

According to Dean, during the 2025 campaign, $2.1 million was donated, Army wide. Approximately 16 percent of Soldiers in Rheinland-Pfalz donated last year, for a total of $31,600. Due to the high costs associated with PCS moves to this region, $1.9M was distributed to Soldiers in Rhheinland-Pfalz via grants and loans.

“Seek out your unit representatives to learn about AER. You can donate online or through your unit representative,” said Dean, for personnel who are interested in donating “There are also manual methods like cash, check, or allotment forms. QR codes have been developed to allow quick digital donations using cards, Apple Pay, or Google Pay.”

If you would like to contribute to AER online, please visit https://www.armyemergencyrelief.org/donate/ and if you would like to see any additional info go to https://www.armyemergencyrelief.org/ or talk to your unit representative for AER.

Defense News: Pennsylvania Army National Guard Soldiers place 2nd in Lithuania Land Forces Best Infantry Squad competition

Source: United States Army

RUKLA, Lithuania — U.S. Soldiers with the Pennsylvania Army National Guard competed alongside NATO allies in the Lithuanian Land Forces Best Infantry Squad Competition, placing second among foreign teams and marking the first time Army National Guard Soldiers have participated in the multinational event.

The competition, held March 4 and 5, saw the Pennsylvania Army Guard squad compete against two active-component U.S. Army squads, 10 Lithuanian squads, and squads from Germany, Estonia, Latvia, and the Netherlands.

Hosted at the Land Forces’ Maj. Juozas Lukša Training Center and the Gaižiūnai Military Training Area, in Rukla, Lithuania, the competition included physically and mentally demanding tasks designed to evaluate small-unit readiness and tactical proficiency.

“The squad is the basic building block of any military formation, and strong squads create strong formations,” said Brig. Gen. Nerijus Stankevičius, commander of the Lithuanian army.

Though this was the first year an Army National Guard squad competed, the Pennsylvania National Guard and Lithuanian military share a more than 30-year relationship through the Department of War National Guard State Partnership Program, which pairs Guard elements with partner nations worldwide for training and subject matter exchanges.

In 2025, Lithuanian soldiers competed in the Pennsylvania Army Guard’s Best Warrior Competition, leading to an invitation for Pennsylvania Army Guard Soldiers to compete in this year’s Best Infantry Squad competition.

“It is a historical moment,” said Command Sgt. Maj. Eugenijus Žukauskas, command sergeant major of the Lithuanian army. “It’s the first time when Pennsylvania National Guard is participating here.”

Žukauskas emphasized the “great relationship and friendship” that has been built through the SPP pairing, which dates to 1993, one of the first in the program, adding it was a key reason why the Pennsylvania Army Guard was invited to participate in the competition.

The eight-person squad was selected in October following a 14-hour, five-event competition. Those who made the final cut came from multiple Pennsylvania Army Guard units.

Following the selection, the squad began weekly workouts to improve their physical readiness ahead of the competition.

“We’ve held workouts and conditionings twice a week since then, where we’ve worked on mostly endurance,” said Sgt. 1st Class Tyler Devereux, a squad member and forward observer with 2nd Battalion, 166th Regiment (Regional Training Institute). “We’ve also done some track work, some speed work, and gone over some tactical skills that we think may be relevant to some of the tasks we’re going to be asked to perform while we’re here.”

Squad members said they may not have known the specific tasks, but they knew to expect evaluation lanes requiring endurance, teamwork, and tactical decision-making while carrying full combat equipment.

“This competition is essentially going to be two days of straight activity, meaning moving significant distances and encountering different obstacles and different tasks that we’re going to have to complete as a squad as best we can, as fast as we can based on doctrine, based on what we’ve been trained to do,” said U.S. Army Staff Sgt. James Rudershausen, a squad member and Pennsylvania Army Guard Soldier assigned to Range Operations at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania.

The competition tested them on marksmanship and small-arms skills, their ability to operate as a squad in a variety of tactical scenarios, medical triage and evacuation tasks, and reconnaissance tasks, including the use of small drones. All was done under physically challenging conditions that tested communication and teamwork, emphasizing the importance of strong small-unit leadership.

“Strong squad equals strong forces,” Žukauskas said. “If you have a weak squad leader or squad, you cannot expect that high echelon task will be accomplished in the right way.”

In addition to testing squad-level combat skills, the event provided an opportunity for Soldiers from different NATO nations to train together and share tactics and experiences.

“Seeing soldiers from multiple NATO nations training and competing together on Lithuanian soil clearly reflects the strength of our alliance,” Stankevičius said.

The competition also helps strengthen that alliance.

“Any time that we can train with partner nations, especially NATO nations, and be a part of an event or a training exercise that strengthens those relationships, it makes us all the better,” Devereux said. “It increases readiness in the event that we ever have to see each other or work with each other in times of conflict or in a real-world situation.”

And it helps build readiness at home.

“A lot of the knowledge that we’re getting over the next couple of days in the train up is going to be basically how Lithuania tackles a lot of military obstacles, objectives,” said Rudershausen. “We’re going to learn from them and then hopefully come on the other side with more things that we can take back to our Soldiers in Pennsylvania.”

Related Links

The Official Website of the National Guard | NationalGuard.mil

State Partnership Program | NationalGuard.mil

The National Guard on Facebook | Facebook.com/TheNationalGuard

The National Guard on Flickr | Flickr.com/TheNationalGuard

The National Guard on Instagram | Instagram.com/us.nationalguard

The National Guard on X | X.com/USNationalGuard

The National Guard on YouTube | YouTube.com/TheNationalGuard