Federal Judge Douglas R. Cole on March 4 sentenced 38-year-old Quinell Hadden to 18 years in federal prison after prosecutors said he ran a large fentanyl trafficking network that trafficked hundreds of kilograms of fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine across the Cincinnati area. The term, issued in federal court in downtown Cincinnati, came after a multi-year probe into an operation that prosecutors say ran from January 2020 until Hadden’s arrest in 2023.
Court Filings Paint Hadden as the Operation’s Leader
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Court documents in a related federal case describe surveillance, intercepted communications, and stash-house activity that authorities believe linked many distributors to a single Cincinnati-based operation. The filings identify Quinell Hadden as the organization’s leader and describe how evidence acquired during the investigation led to a succession of federal prosecutions, according to GovInfo.
Prosecutors Say the Network Reached Directly to Cartels
Prosecutors said Hadden’s organization obtained at least 100 kilograms of fentanyl directly from the Sinaloa Cartel and 45 kilograms of cocaine from members of the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación, as well as precursor chemicals from China and bulk packages mailed from Arizona. They said in court that Hadden chopped and processed each kilogram into three to four kilos of final product, utilizing cutting chemicals that increased the drugs’ profitability while making them dangerously unpredictable.
Hadden pleaded guilty to narcotics trafficking and money laundering conspiracy in October 2025, and his counsel stated, “Mr. Hadden took full responsibility for his actions and accepted his sentence with dignity,” according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.
National Overdose Crisis, Local Stakes
According to public health data, synthetic opioids such as fentanyl continue to be a major cause of overdose deaths, despite a minor drop in projected national totals in 2023. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, synthetic opioids have contributed to an increase in overdose death, and attempts to disrupt large-scale supply remain an important aspect of the response.
Dozens of Defendants and Ongoing Cases
According to officials, the investigation discovered around 40 additional individuals in six federal trials related to the same network. Prosecutors have already obtained heavy terms for several associates: Braylon Carr received 158 months in January 2026, while co-defendant Alantee Hulbert was sentenced to 144 months on March 4. The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that several other defendants’ cases are still pending.
Next Steps in a Long-Running Probe
The Southern District’s multi-agency investigation, which included federal, state, and local partners, continues, and linked court dockets reveal ongoing filings in relevant cases. Law enforcement officials urge anyone with information regarding the network to contact the United States Attorney’s Office or local police.









