Feds Bust El Paso Man in Alleged Coke Deals and Glock Switch Sting

A federal sting that stretched from Las Cruces to El Paso has left one local man facing serious prison time. According to court records, Victor Andrew Pardo Jr. is accused of selling cocaine and illegal machine gun conversion devices to undercover agents, first in 2025 and again in two controlled buys this year. He now faces federal counts that include possession with intent to distribute, conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and unlawful possession of an unregistered firearm, and he remains in custody while the case moves forward.

Undercover buys and timeline

Investigators working with the DEA, ATF, and the Department of the Army CID first zeroed in on Pardo in August 2025, according to KVIA. The outlet reports that on Aug. 19, 2025, agents made a controlled purchase of a machine gun conversion device from Pardo in Las Cruces for $300. The part was later analyzed and determined to meet the federal legal definition of a machine gun.

KVIA, citing court documents, reports that a surveillance team followed Pardo from his Las Cruces residence to a meeting in El Paso on Jan. 27. There, he allegedly sold about 249.6 grams of cocaine for $5,000. On Feb. 19, agents say he again weighed and sold roughly 251.6 grams of cocaine, this time at his Las Cruces home. Those transactions form the backbone of the drug and firearms counts now pending against him.

Why conversion devices matter

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives states that parts designed to convert a semi-automatic firearm into a fully automatic firearm – often called “switches,” “chips” or “auto sears” – are treated as machine guns under federal law even when they are not attached to a weapon. ATF has warned that these small devices can make a pistol or rifle fire continuously with a single trigger pull and that possessing, manufacturing, or selling them can lead straight to federal prosecution.

Federal enforcement in New Mexico

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in New Mexico has brought multiple recent cases that combine conversion devices with drug and firearms charges as part of a broader regional enforcement push. Press releases from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of New Mexico, describe prior guilty pleas and sentences for selling or manufacturing these parts and repeatedly emphasize the public safety risks they say the devices pose.

Legal ramifications

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