 It's July and it's getting hot, just like the deals at Appalachian Wireless. All month get the Samsung Galaxy S8 for just a penny with a two-year agreement. But don't wait because the deal ends soon. Better service, bigger savings. That's today's Appalachian Wireless. A Pike County grand jury handed down charges against two people allegedly found to be trafficking an approximately $100,000 worth of methamphetamine. 25-year-old Jeremy Gonzalez and 22-year-old Amanda Casey were taken into custody July 10th after police responded to a noise complaint at the Brookshire Inn in Pikeville. Gonzalez from Georgia and Casey from Hurley, Virginia were allegedly found with a large amount of methamphetamine and evidence the pair was trafficking in the drug. Usually it's sold in amounts of one gram or even half a gram. A gram sells for anywhere from $100 to $150, depending on the purity. It's my understanding this is very pure product. So when they waited out and thought about the amount that it could have sold for on the street, the low estimate is $75,000 and it could have exceeded $100,000 of ice found with these two people. It was obvious they were going to distribute it because of the scales and the baggies that were found. So a tremendous effort by the city police here in stopping a truly horrific drug from hitting our streets and also arresting the two people in Bob. Now one of the interesting questions to me about it because of their young age, who entrusted these two people with $100,000 worth of narcotics? That Commonwealth's attorney Rick Bartley said it's possible Jeremy Gonzalez is in the U.S. illegally and he anticipates federal authorities getting involved in the case. This was a pretty big operation by two pretty young people and it's very troubling when you think about all the implications and all the ramifications if this had not been found because of a noise complaint at the hotel. Jeremy Gonzalez and Amanda Casey were indicted on felony charges of first-degree trafficking in a controlled substance and first-degree possession of a controlled substance as well as misdemeanor charges of third-degree possession and possession of drug paraphernalia. In Pikeville, Chris Anderson, EKB News.