A meth distribution conviction sent John Paul Majerus II to federal prison for the first time in 2017. Years later, he emerged with new connections and bosses who gave their orders while still incarcerated themselves.
Dubbing himself “Money,” the 34-year-old Burnsville man ramped up his meth trafficking as his original federal sentence neared its end in 2022. Federal agents working undercover pegged Majerus as a key middleman for a trafficking organization that funneled meth north from Mexico in shipments of up to 50 pounds per carload.
But prosecutors just disclosed last month that Majerus had been doing the bidding of higher-ups who conducted their business from within federal prison walls.
Majerus was arrested and indicted alongside one other person in March 2023 and pleaded guilty later that year to conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. Senior U.S. District Judge David Doty on Tuesday sentenced Majerus to 15 years in federal prison on the new conviction, imposing the mandatory minimum sentence in the case at the request of both Majerus’ lawyer and the prosecution.
A second defendant, Sara Evenson, pleaded guilty last month and is awaiting a sentencing date of her own. However, the organization’s incarcerated leaders have yet to be publicly named or charged.
According to a Feb. 7 memo outlining the government’s arguments before Majerus’ sentencing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lauren Roso wrote that the “large-scale meth trafficking organization” Majerus worked for was helmed by “unindicted coconspirators incarcerated with the Bureau of Prisons, who would broker the sale of bulk amounts of methamphetamine and enlist individuals in the community to distribute the same.”

Court documents say one of the federally incarcerated co-conspirators connected an undercover U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent with Majerus in September 2022 to broker a 1-pound meth sale for $3,000. A month after being released from prison, Majerus was stopped by police in November 2022. Officers did not find any narcotics on him but seized drug ledgers and wire receipts for money sent to Mexico. They also uncovered cellphone communications with someone later identified as Evenson, who was later found to be running a Minneapolis stash house for the group.
Meanwhile, a courier arrested near Des Moines in January 2023 with more than 50 pounds of methamphetamine destined for Minnesota identified Majerus as someone who would instruct them where to deliver portions of bulk meth shipments being driven north.