Owen Beckford Previously Pled Guilty to Operating as a Major Trafficker and Conspiracy Charges
Orange County District Attorney David M. Hoovler announced that Owen Beckford, a/k/a Marvin Ottley, age 55, of Newburgh, was sentenced in Orange County Court to an aggregate term of fifteen (15) years in prison relative to his guilty pleas to Operating as a Major Trafficker and Conspiracy in the Second Degree. As part of the sentence, Beckford also forfeited $8,909.
The case was the result of the coordinated efforts of numerous law enforcement agencies who conducted an enforcement action after a long-term investigation into firearm and narcotics trafficking in Orange County. The operation, code named “Hot Lunch”, resulted in the arrests of twenty-six (26) people charged with narcotics, firearm and conspiracy offenses, and is believed to be the largest narcotics and gun trafficking case in the history of Orange County.
A six (6) month long intensive investigation into illegal firearms and narcotics trafficking in Orange County was conducted by the Orange County Drug Task Force (OCDTF), the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, together with the Orange County District Attorney’s Office, the City of Middletown Police Department, New York State Police, the City of Poughkeepsie Police Department, and the Hudson Valley Crime Analysis Center. As alleged in documents filed and statements made in court, the investigation revealed that Kirkland Salmon was at the center of four different conspiracies to traffic narcotics and firearms through Orange County. Salmon was supplied with quantities of cocaine by two different narcotics suppliers, Owen Beckford a/k/a Marvin Ottley and Joshua Arnold, to distribute from his food truck parked in the City of Newburgh. Salmon was also supplied with firearms to resell in Orange County by Andre Smith. Over the course of the investigation, law enforcement learned of Beckford’s and Arnold’s narcotics distribution organizations, both of which distributed cocaine in the City of Newburgh and elsewhere in Orange County. During the investigation, law enforcement recovered twenty-four (24) firearms and one (1) kilogram of cocaine. On the day of the enforcement action on May 21, 2024, police additionally recovered over eleven (11) kilograms of cocaine, approximately ninety (90) grams of fentanyl, seven (7) guns, high-capacity magazines, numerous rounds of ammunition, approximately $45,000 of US currency, scales and packaging materials used in narcotics trafficking and ten (10) vehicles that were instrumentalities of the crimes charged. Additionally, law enforcement seized one food truck.
At the plea proceedings, Beckford admitted to operating as a major trafficker, by acting as a “profiteer”, and possessing within six months or less, cocaine having an aggregate value of $75,000 or more, and also to participating in a conspiracy to distribute narcotics. Police recovered 9.5 kilograms of cocaine from the City of Newburgh apartment that Beckford was using to store his narcotics during the period of the investigation. Beckford’s plea was the sixteenth time that a defendant has pled guilty to Operating as a Major Trafficker since District Attorney Hoovler took office.
District Attorney Hoovler thanked the agencies involved in the investigation, as well as the following agencies who assisted in the enforcement action on May 21, 2024: City of Newburgh Police Department; Town of Newburgh Police Department; Town of Woodbury Police Department; Town of Montgomery Police Department; Town of Wallkill Police Department; and the Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson Police Department.
“Operation Hot Lunch stands as an example of the incredible work that can be accomplished by a dedicated team of investigators and prosecutors who aim to protect our communities from the devastation caused by narcotics and illegal firearms,” said District Attorney David M. Hoovler. “I remain grateful to all the local, state and federal law enforcement officers who worked on this case and who risk their lives every day to keep us safe. In Orange County, we have committed to fighting the malignancy of narcotics and the violence we often see in the wake. We will not stop in our pursuit of drug and gun dealers and will continue to leverage all of our law enforcement partnerships to deliver justice on behalf of the residents of Orange County.”
“Owen Beckford engaged in the illegal trafficking of firearms and narcotics for personal financial gain, prioritizing profit over public safety. Following an extensive investigation, this trafficking network has been dismantled, preventing further acts of violence and the distribution of dangerous drugs within our communities. ATF New York, in partnership with law enforcement agencies at the federal, state, and local levels, remains committed to protecting the public and disrupting criminal organizations that threaten community safety,” said Special Agent in Charge of the ATF New York Field Division Bryan DiGirolamo.
The cases are being prosecuted by Senior Assistant District Attorney Alexis Gregory.
A criminal charge is merely an allegation by the police that a defendant has committed a violation of the criminal law, and it is not evidence of guilt. All defendants are presumed innocent and entitled to a fair trial, during which it will be the State of New York’s burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.


