"The Dominican Nightmare" went from fighting Sean Strickland in the Octagon to facing drug trafficking charges in a massive Montreal anti-gang raid.

On December 8, 2025, Montreal police conducted a major raid targeting an alleged drug trafficking network operating between Toronto and Montreal.

When the operation concluded, officers had seized 102 kilograms (224 pounds) of cocaine worth $2.3 million Canadian dollars ($1.7 million USD), along with heroin, firearms, cash, and vehicles.

Among the three suspects arrested: Alex Garcia, a former UFC welterweight fighter who once shared the Octagon with current UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland.

The arrest marks one of the most significant drug busts involving a former UFC athlete in recent memory — and it raises serious questions about what happens to fighters after their careers end and the paychecks stop coming.  

The Bust: What Police Found

Montreal's Anti-Gang Unit executed coordinated raids across multiple locations on December 8th, targeting what authorities described as a major drug trafficking operation.

What was seized:

  • 102 kilograms of cocaine (valued at $2.3 million CAD / $1.7 million USD)
  • 5 kilograms of heroin
  • 20 liters of GHB (gamma-hydroxybutyrate, often called a "date rape drug")
  • $306,000 CAD in cash ($223,000 USD)
  • 3 firearms
  • 2 vehicles

The raids took place across several Montreal boroughs including Lachine, LaSalle, Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Ville-Marie, Saint-Laurent, and the city of Lorraine.

Three suspects were arrested and charged:

1. Alex Garcia (Lenin Billy Garcia Ciriaco), 38

2. Michele Laddaga, 49

  • Charged with drug trafficking and possession for the purpose of trafficking
  • Facing the most severe charges among the three arrested

3. Victor Julio Sanchez Medrano, 45

  • Charged with drug trafficking and related financial crimes

Two additional suspects remain at large with arrest warrants issued:

4. Rattana Sem, 40

5. Véronique Plouffe, 37 (Sem's wife)

Montreal police have offered rewards for information leading to their capture.

How The Operation Worked: Toronto To Montreal Pipeline

According to Montreal police, the investigation began in July 2025 after authorities identified suspicious activity involving drug distribution between Toronto and Montreal.

The alleged operation:

Step 1: Cocaine sourced in the Toronto area at lower wholesale prices

Step 2: Drugs transported to Montreal

Step 3: Cocaine sold in Montreal at significantly marked-up street prices

The markup: Montreal street prices for cocaine are substantially higher than Toronto wholesale costs, making the 260-mile transport route extremely profitable.

Montreal police stated in their press release: "Launched in July 2025, this criminal investigation revealed that the Toronto area was being used as a supply source and that the drugs were then being resold at a higher price in Greater Montreal."

The operation allegedly moved massive quantities of narcotics over several months before police shut it down.

Who Is Alex Garcia? From UFC Octagon To Drug Charges

Alex Garcia, nicknamed "The Dominican Nightmare," competed in the UFC's welterweight division (170 pounds) from 2013 to 2018.

UFC Career Stats:

  • Record: 5-5 in the UFC (10 fights total)
  • Overall MMA record: 17-6
  • Division: Welterweight (170 lbs)
  • Fighting out of: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Training camp: TriStar Gym (alongside Georges St-Pierre, Olivier Aubin-Mercier, and others)

Notable UFC Opponents:

Sean Strickland (Current UFC Middleweight Champion) - Garcia lost by decision to Strickland in 2014, back when Strickland was still a welterweight. Strickland would go on to win the UFC middleweight title in 2023.

Neil Magny (UFC Veteran with 30+ UFC fights) - Garcia lost by decision

Tim Means (UFC Veteran) - Garcia lost by decision

Muslim Salikhov (Current UFC fighter) - Garcia defeated Salikhov by decision in 2017

Mike Swick (UFC Veteran) - Garcia's biggest win came in 2015 when he defeated Swick, forcing the veteran to retire

UFC Exit:

Garcia was released from the UFC in 2018 after suffering back-to-back decision losses to Ryan LaFlare and Court McGee. His 5-5 record wasn't enough to keep his roster spot as the UFC cut several fighters during a roster reduction period.

Post-UFC Career:

After leaving the UFC, Garcia signed with ACA (Absolute Championship Akhmat), a Russian MMA organization. He went 0-2 in ACA, suffering knockout losses in both 2019 and early 2020.

His last recorded MMA fight was a loss to Abdul-Rakhman Dzhanaev in March 2020.

Garcia hadn't competed professionally since 2020 — nearly five years before his arrest.


The TriStar Gym Connection

Garcia trained at TriStar Gym in Montreal, one of the most famous MMA gyms in the world.

TriStar, led by renowned coach Firas Zahabi, has produced multiple UFC champions and contenders including:

  • Georges St-Pierre (arguably the greatest welterweight of all time)
  • Rory MacDonald (former UFC title challenger)
  • Olivier Aubin-Mercier (UFC and PFL fighter)
  • Aiemann Zahabi (UFC fighter and Firas' brother)

Garcia trained alongside these elite athletes during his UFC career, receiving world-class coaching and training partners.

The contrast between training at an elite gym with champions and being arrested five years later with 224 pounds of cocaine is stark.

What Fighters Earn (And What Happens When It Stops)

Garcia's alleged involvement in drug trafficking raises uncomfortable questions about fighter pay and post-career struggles.

What UFC fighters actually earn:

Main card fighters (upper tier): $150K-500K+ per fight

Mid-tier fighters: $50K-150K per fight

Prelim fighters: $12K-50K per fight

Garcia, as a prelim/lower-card fighter with a 5-5 record, likely earned in the $30K-60K range per fight (including win bonuses).

Over 10 UFC fights, Garcia probably earned $300K-500K total before taxes, management fees, and training costs.

After taxes (roughly 30-40%), management/coaching fees (10-20%), and training camp costs ($10K-20K per camp), fighters like Garcia might net $150K-250K over their entire UFC career.

That's spread over 5 years.

Annual UFC earnings for a fighter like Garcia: ~$30K-50K per year

Once released from the UFC, fighters face harsh realities:

  • No pension or retirement benefits
  • No health insurance after departure
  • Brain trauma and physical damage from years of fighting
  • Limited marketable skills outside fighting
  • Age (late 30s-early 40s) making career transitions difficult

Some fighters successfully transition to coaching, commentary, or other careers. Others struggle.

Garcia went from UFC fighter to alleged drug trafficker in less than five years.

The Bigger Pattern: UFC Fighters And Legal Troubles

Garcia isn't the first UFC fighter arrested on serious charges. The sport has seen numerous fighters face legal issues post-career:

War Machine (Jon Koppenhaver) - Currently serving life in prison for attempted murder and sexual assault

Abel Trujillo - Arrested multiple times on various charges including assault

Thiago Silva - Arrested for attempted murder (charges later dropped)

Dequan Townsend - Failed drug test for cocaine use while still active

Multiple fighters - Arrested for DUI, domestic violence, assault

The pattern suggests that the transition from professional fighting to civilian life is difficult — especially for fighters who didn't earn substantial money during their careers.

The Legal Consequences Garcia Faces

Garcia is charged with:

1. Drug trafficking (cocaine and heroin)

2. Possession of proceeds of crime (the $306,000 cash seized)

In Canada, these charges carry severe penalties:

Drug trafficking (cocaine, large quantities):

  • Minimum sentence: Varies based on quantity
  • Maximum sentence: Life imprisonment
  • For 102 kilograms, Garcia faces decades in prison if convicted

Possession of proceeds of crime:

  • Additional charges that can add years to sentencing
  • Seizing of all assets connected to criminal activity

The sheer quantity of cocaine (102 kilograms) indicates this wasn't personal use — this was a large-scale trafficking operation.

For context: 102 kilograms is 224 pounds of cocaine. That's enough to create approximately 1 million individual doses at street level.

Garcia's Attorney: Real Name And Legal Strategy

Garcia was arrested under his legal name: Lenin Billy Garcia Ciriaco

He used "Alex Garcia" as his fighting name during his UFC career.

As of this writing, Garcia has not issued a public statement. No attorney has been publicly identified representing him.

He appeared in Montreal courthouse following his December 8th arrest and remains in custody pending further legal proceedings.

The fact that two suspects remain at large (Rattana Sem and Véronique Plouffe) suggests the investigation is ongoing. Garcia may be offered plea deals in exchange for cooperation, though no such deals have been reported.

What This Means For The UFC

The UFC has no obligation to comment on Garcia's arrest — he hasn't been with the promotion since 2018.

However, cases like this raise questions about:

Fighter welfare: Should the UFC provide more post-career support?

Compensation: Do fighters earn enough to sustain themselves after retirement?

Health monitoring: Are fighters screened for CTE/brain trauma that might impair decision-making?

The UFC has faced criticism for years about fighter pay, lack of health insurance, and minimal retirement benefits. Garcia's case won't help that reputation.

The Two Suspects Still At Large

Montreal police continue searching for:

Rattana Sem, 40 - Arrest warrant issued

Véronique Plouffe, 37 (Sem's wife) - Arrest warrant issued

Both are considered connected to the trafficking network and are wanted on drug-related charges.

Montreal police have offered cash rewards for information leading to their arrest. Anyone with information is urged to contact Montreal's Anti-Gang Unit.

The investigation remains open as authorities attempt to dismantle the entire network.

What Happens Next

Short term:

  • Garcia remains in custody awaiting trial
  • Prosecutors will build case using seized evidence (drugs, cash, firearms)
  • Defense attorneys will challenge evidence and charges
  • Potential plea deal negotiations

Long term:

  • If convicted, Garcia faces decades in Canadian prison
  • All assets connected to criminal activity will be seized
  • His UFC career and legacy are now permanently tainted
  • Other suspects face similar consequences

For the investigation:

  • Police continue hunting the two at-large suspects
  • Additional arrests may follow as investigation expands
  • Authorities will trace the Toronto supply source
  • Money laundering charges may be added

The Uncomfortable Truth About Fighter Struggles

Alex Garcia went from fighting in the world's premier MMA organization to allegedly trafficking 224 pounds of cocaine.

The fall is dramatic — but maybe not surprising.

Fighters dedicate their entire youth to combat sports. They absorb brain trauma. They earn modest pay (outside the top 1%). They retire in their 30s with limited skills and often serious health issues.

Some successfully transition. Many struggle.

Garcia is now the face of that struggle — a cautionary tale about what happens when the fighting stops, the money runs out, and former athletes make desperate decisions.

The cocaine seized in Garcia's arrest could have created a million doses. The violence, addiction, and destruction that amount of drugs causes is incalculable.

"The Dominican Nightmare" once fought in front of thousands. Now he's facing decades in prison.