A Dallas man will serve 20 years in federal prison after authorities searched a southeast Dallas home that doubled as a clandestine methamphetamine recrystallization lab where two underage children were staying, according to prosecutors. Victor Manuel Gaona pled guilty to possessing methamphetamine with the intent to distribute and was sentenced to 240 months in federal prison. Authorities claim they also found packaged heroin and makeshift drug-processing equipment inside the home.
According to court records and MyTexasDaily reporting, Drug Enforcement Administration officials executed a search warrant at a house on Ben Hur Street on June 18, 2024. Agents reported finding methamphetamine in liquid, intermediate, and completed forms, as well as a propane tank, a huge burner, sieves, gloves, and drug packaging bags. According to the documents, heroin already packaged for sale was hidden in a utility closet beneath children’s baggage, while finished meth was kept in a bedroom shared by Gaona and co-defendant Epifanio Flores Magana. According to the publication, U.S. District Judge Ada E. Brown imposed Gaona’s 240-month term. Flores Magana is scheduled to be punished on April 14, 2026, while Omar Castro-Sandoval received a 168-month term on January 20.
The United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Texas filed the lawsuit after an investigation by the Dallas Homeland Security Task Force and federal partners. According to a previous press release from the United States Attorney’s Office, investigators in North Texas confiscated comparable recrystallization equipment and related lab materials during DEA-led investigations in other meth trafficking cases.
Federal prosecutors in the Northern District of Texas are known for seeking harsh penalties in meth cases, and judges there frequently sign off on sentences that exceed the national average. According to The Dallas Morning News, the district’s median methamphetamine sentence is much higher than the national norm, and decades-long prison terms are common in that courthouse.
Gaona is now scheduled to begin serving his 240-month federal sentence. The punishment for Epifanio Flores Magana in the case will be decided at a hearing on April 14, 2026. Prosecutors said the operation is part of a bigger regional effort to disrupt organized meth distribution in North Texas areas.









