Former UofA Student Sentenced For Drug Trafficking And Firearms Offenses

A former University of Arizona student from Tacoma, Jonathan Edward Mayer, has been sentenced to 84 months in prison after pleading guilty to multiple felonies involving guns and drugs.

Mayer, age 22, pleaded guilty to Conspiracy to Possess with Intent to Distribute Marijuana, Possession with Intent to Distribute Marijuana, Possession of a Firearm in Furtherance of a Drug Trafficking Crime, and three counts of Possession of Unregistered Firearms, specifically pertaining to a privately manufactured firearm, machine gun conversion devices, and a silencer.

Mayer was attending the University of Arizona in October of 2021 when agents executed a search warrant on his apartment. Underneath his bed, agents found a bag of marijuana and the privately manufactured firearm with an automatic conversion switch that rendered it a machine gun. Agents also discovered $20,000 in U.S. currency, individually wrapped cocaine, a small bulk quantity of cocaine, six firearms, high-capacity magazines, a silencer, 10 grams of mushrooms, 15 grams of amphetamines, approximately one gram of LSD, and a gold money counter.

Several firearms were seized, including a Glock pistol loaded with a 30-round magazine found in a backpack that Mayer carried around campus.

Mayer admitted to mailing marijuana, mushrooms, and machine gun conversion devices through the United States Postal Service to various locations in the United States.

drug-traffickingFirearms OffensesJonathan Edward MayerTacomauniversity of arizona