A St. Paul couple who are the founders of a drug recovery organization are connected to a drug case involving a Mexico-based trafficking organization, according to a criminal complaint in Ramsey County District Court. Both are facing two counts of felony drug charges.
Xianna Moua Yang and her husband, Yeng Moua, are each charged with one first-degree felony charge of selling or aiding in the selling of 17 grams or more of cocaine or methamphetamine within 90 days and one first-degree felony charge of possessing 50 grams or more of cocaine or methamphetamine. Earlier in the month, Moua Yang, 37, was found with her 40-year-old husband in a car containing 3 pounds of illicit drugs. Their bail is each set at $150,000.
‘Helping others’ while in recovery
The couple opened their nonprofit, Koom Recovery, in 2024, and said their mission was to help Hmong people in Minnesota recover from substance abuse disorder, as people who have struggled with addiction themselves.
SMALL FILE — MAX. WIDTH FOR PRINT: 3 INCHES — Xianna Moua Yang, 37, was charged Jan. 8, 2026, in Ramsey County with two felony counts of drug possession and sale, for picking up drugs from someone in connection with a Mexican drug trafficking organization police had been investigating for months, during the evening of Jan. 8, 2026. (Courtesy of Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)
According to the criminal complaint, on Jan. 8, officers watched as Moua Yang and Moua drove to a Minneapolis hotel. A Hispanic man came out of the hotel with a black suitcase and wheeled it to the car, placing it in the back seat, according to the complaint.
Officers followed the car to the East Side of St. Paul, where they conducted a traffic stop, according to the complaint.
According to the charges, Minnesota agencies have been investigating a Mexico-based drug trafficking organization, “DTO,” for several months. Two other people were identified by law enforcement as “associates of DTO,” or “runners” who deliver drugs to people on behalf of the organization.
Earlier on the same day that Moua Yang and Moua were observed at the Minneapolis hotel, the two runners identified by officers were seen there interacting with a man who wheeled out a suitcase to their car. The two runners were later found with 3 pounds of drugs, which tested positive for methamphetamine, according to the complaint.
When officers stopped Moua Yang and Moua, who was driving, he was asked if he had drugs or firearms with him. He replied that he “did not know.” Moua told officers he was on his way to “help people,” and that he and his wife were on their way home. He said he was recently off probation for controlled substances and firearms and that he and his wife are in recovery, according to the complaint.
SMALL FILE — MAX. WIDTH FOR PRINT: 3 INCHES — Yeng Moua, 40, was charged Jan. 8, 2026, in Ramsey County with two felony counts of aiding with drug possession and sale, after picking up drugs from someone in connection with a Mexican drug trafficking organization police had been investigating for months, during the evening of Jan. 8, 2026. (Courtesy of Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)
Moua later told officers that he did not know anything illegal was in the car. He said that “he moves things for people but does not go through the things.”
Moua Yang told officers that the “stuff” in the car was hers and that her husband had nothing to do with it.
Officers found 3 pounds of drugs that tested positive for methamphetamine in a black garbage bag that was ripped open and had identical packaging as the drugs recovered in the runners’ car, according to the charges.
Moua Yang and Moua were arrested on suspicion of drug possession.
‘Knows what she is doing is wrong’
Moua Yang later told an officer that she participated in two drug runs for a Hispanic man she knows as “Layo,” according to the complaint. She told officers that she needed money and “knows what she is doing is wrong, as she is a drug counselor and a recovered drug addict.”
Moua Yang said “Layo” contacted her using a Mexican telephone number and told her where to pick up and deliver the drugs. Moua Yang told police that every time she moves the drugs, she receives $1,000.
According to the charges, Moua Yang told her husband before the drug exchange at the hotel that they were on the way to pick up donations for people experiencing homelessness. When Moua saw that the “donations” in question were drugs, he became angry, the charges said. The two argued, and while her husband drove the car, Moua Yang “crawled into the back seat, took the drugs out of the suitcase, and put them in the garbage bag.”
Moua Yang’s next court hearing will be held Wednesday. Moua’s next hearing will take place March 4.
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