A confidential informant working with the Falls Township Police Department as part of a methamphetamine investigation led to the arrest of a boyfriend-girlfriend duo who were allegedly distributing copious amounts of the drug out of a Woolston Drive home. As police secured search and arrest warrants, the couple according to investigators, were caught on jail phone conversation recordings discussing the sale of a large amount of marijuana that was to be used to pay for legal fees and everyday bills.
District Judge John T. Galloway arraigned Nicole Hiller on February 29 and her boyfriend, Edward J Seibert Jr (on March 3) on four felony charges of manufacture, delivery, or possession with intent to distribute
Galloway set unsecured bail of $50,000 for Hiller. Bail for Seibert, who was already in jail on a seperate set of charges was set at 10 percent of $250,000.00
According to police, on Jan. 27, 2026 Falls Twp. Police Cpl Ryan Murphy received an anonymous tip Seibert was selling methamphetamine out of a residence in the Morrisville section of the township. The caller had said he provided a ride to a subject who was going to 266 Woolston Drive home to pick up multiple ounces of methamphetamine from Seibert. The tipster also told the officer that Seibert (at the time) had an active arrest warrant out of Bristol Township

266 Woolston Drive in the Morrisville section of Falls Twp where authorities allegedly discovered pounds of methamphetamine.
Falls Twp Police were familiar with Seibert and knew at the time he was on parole for selling narcotics and being in possession of a firearm. According to online court records, Seibert had served a multiple stretches in jail.
Investigators ran Seibert through NCIC and confirmed the active arrest warrant for a firearms related offenses and knew Seibert was stopped on November 13. 2025 while operating a motorcycle with no license plate. During that interaction, Seibert said he is residing at the Woolston Drive address. Murphy has been to the same address for prior domestic dispute calls. None of these calls involved Seibert. Through these contacts, police came to know Hiller who owns the home.
During these domestic dispute calls, her assumed to be ex-husband, accused her of infidelity and using drugs. However, he did not have any real information that she was using drugs other than she was “acting differently”. In August of 2024 Nicole obtained a PFA against her ex-husband, who was ordered to vacate the home. Her ex-husband has not resided at the residence since, this too was confirmed through prison phone calls. Through these same prison phone calls and surveillance, it was confirmed that Hiller is the owner of the home. Seibert, before being housed in Bucks County Correctional, resided there. No other people reside at the home except for her three children aged eight, 16 and 18, police said in court records.

Credit: Lower Bucks Source
Police researched all vehicles associated with Hiller in our in-house records management system discovered she recently been operating two different vehicles. The first being a red Hyundai SUV bearing Pennsylvania registration “MHP***”, I ran this registration through NCIC and found it to be a dead plate registered to Hiller. The second is a silver Dodge Journey bearing Pennsylvania registration “KHX****”. Police ran this registration through NCIC and found that it is still an active registration registered to Hiller. The officer checked the automatic license plate reader system, VIPR. The Hyundai had not hit on any intersections in the past month.
Investigators researched the Dodge and found that it is actively being driven. The vehicle will occasionally “hit” on an intersection in the early evening between the hours of 3 p.m. -6 p.m. The vehicle is mostly driven late at night and early morning between the hours of 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. This is common amongst those operating in narcotic sales, specifically those involved in selling methamphetamine.
Investigators found the vehicle was consistently traveling north and south on Bristol Pike through Bristol Township during the early hours often times passing through the same intersection multiple times minutes apart.
Police noted in court records there are number of motels and hotels that line Bristol Pike in Bristol Twp and knew there is a large amount of drug users that reside in those hotels.
On Jan. 24, 25, and 29 of 2026, the vehicle entered west bound 95 through Street Road, towards Philadelphia, and returned back east bound 95 at Street Road 30-50 minutes later. Through police training and experience the officer knew those involved in narcotic sales will go to larger cities to acquire more product to sell.
On Jan. 30, 2026 surveillance was conducted at the Woolston Drive property. Detectives Sargent observed Seibert coming and going from the property with Hiller. On the same day, an interview was conducted with confidential source #1 (CS #1). CS #1 has been purchasing methamphetamine from Seibert for a short amount of time. CS#1 said that the methamphetamine recovered on their person was bought from Seibert earlier that day. CS #1 contacts Seibert via cellphone to set up deals. CS #1 showed me a number of text messages in which they are setting up drug deals. In these text messages Seibert references Hiller to be involved in the weighing of the narcotics. CS#1 knows Seibert to purchase and sell large quantities of methamphetamine. These amounts range from a quarter pound to two pounds at a time. CS #1 knows Seibert to make around $10,000 a week selling methamphetamine. CS #1 knows that Seibert has anywhere from $20,000-$30,000 cash, that he keeps in a safe in Hiller’s house, more specifically in a safe in her bedroom closet behind the door to enter her room. Seibert will use these funds to pay bills for the residence, investigators said.
On Jan. 31, 2026 around 7 p.m. Seibert was arrested for his active warrant. Bensalem Police made the arrest. Falls Twp. Murphy spoke with the arresting Officer. The officer said, according to court records, that they had received a call for a suspicious person possibly staking out the business for a burglary. When they arrived on scene they found Seibert in a U-Haul bearing a Arizona registration. Bensalem Police said they obtained consent to search the vehicle and they did not find any drug paraphernalia. They did find him to be in possession of $800 cash that was sent with him to the prison. This was later confirmed through his prison phone call balance inquiry.
In February of 2026, police spoke with another anonymous complainant. The complainant advised the officer that Hiller has continued Seibert’s business in his absence and is selling narcotics. CS #1 confirmed this to be true, investigators said in court papers.
Murphy checked Seibert’s prison phone calls with a county investigator . Between the dates of Jan. 31 to Feb. 18, Seibert made 71 calls. Seibert calls only two phone numbers. The first phone number is Hillers The second phone number, is his child’s mother, according to court records.
Between the dates of Feb. 7, 2026 and Feb. 18, 2026, 18 calls were made between Hiller and Seibert in which they are discussing selling 150 pounds of marijuana to Seibert’s former cellmate, Joshua Dupree. These calls were made from the recorded Bucks County Prison phone system. These 18 calls consisted of the couple negotiating the price of the marijuana, Seibert instructing Hiller on how to package the marijuana, and their plans on how they are going to spend the money. Hiller was to sell the 150 pounds of marijuana mixed with woodchip’s to Dupree after he got out of prison, for $25 a pound. Seibert described the marijuana to be in 5 totes that should weigh about 20 pounds each. Dupree was going to give Hiller $3000.00. After Dupree broke down the marijuana into smaller increment (eighths, quarters, etc…. ). he was to return with another $1000 for Hiller. She was then to use the money to pay for Seibert’s attorney, bail, and bills for the house, said investigators in court papers.

Bucks County Jail
During these same phone calls, Seibert instructed Hiller to take the 5 pounds of Keif that were in the house and cook it into butter, “like she had done before”. He then provided her with step by step instructions on how to cook it into the butter. Through Officer Murphy’s training and experience he knew Keif to be the potent powder concentrate from the marijuana plant. Subjects will often take the Keif and cook it into butter. They will then use that butter to cook into baked goods known as edibles.
While listening to these phone calls Hiller and Seibert began talking about taxes. During these conversations police found that neither Hiller or Seibert have legitimate sources of incomes and are both unemployed. During one phone call Seibert asks Hiller if she is still in business. Hiller s said she is okay on money because she had one good day and is planning on having another good day.
A search warrant for the Woolston Drive residence was signed and sealed by Judge Galloway on Feb 19 and executed the following morning.
Residents in both the Falls section of Morrisville and Morrisville Borough posted on various social media sites the “heavy police presence” on Woolston Dr
Among the items police discovered pursuant to the warrant;
- Police located a 27 gallon yellow and black plastic tote full of suspected marijuana mixed with woodchips and a 100-gallon black trash bag full of suspected marijuana and woodchips. This tote matched the description provided by Seibert in the phone calls. Beneath the yellow and black tote, police located three 100-gallon black trash bags that smelled heavily of marijuana and contained remnants of marijuana flakes and woodchips. At the entrance to the garage from the kitchen, there was a camera mounted to the wall pointed in the area of the tote and garbage bag. Through police training and experience the officer knew those involved in large narcotic sales will often set surveillance cameras on where they store their product to ensure no one steals from it.
- In a bedroom containing belongings to both Seibert and Hiller, police located a metal container that held three plastic sandwich bags full of white crystalized substance, one smaller coin sized plastic bag full of a white crystalized substance, and one pink plastic straw. Through training and experience, Ofc. Murphy could identify this substance to be methamphetamine. These bags were later measured with a department-owned scale and weighed four ounces. The white crystalized substance was later “NIK” tested and tested positive for methamphetamine. This room also had a camera pointed to the area in which the metal container was located. It is to be noted that this bedroom and the garage were the only two areas in which cameras were set up in the residence. These two areas were the only areas in which large amounts of narcotics, packaging, and paraphernalia consistent with the distribution of narcotics were located.
- 2 plastic containers, Inside these containers were a number of plastic bags that contained a large amount of smaller coin sized plastic bags, Through training and experience the officer knew those involved in the sales of large amounts of narcotics will often keep a large amount coin-sized bags to package and distribute their product. A digital scale that had white powder residue and also green and brown residue was located in this area. The residue was consistent with methamphetamine and marijuana.
- In the same area where these containers were located, Cpl. Sansone located two plastic coin sized bags full of suspected methamphetamine. The bags in which the suspected methamphetamine was stored in, matched the bags located in the 2) containers
According to police, in an armoire in the couple’s bedroom, police located seven cellphones that appeared to be broken or old. Under an evidence bag containing a property receipt from Bensalem Police, dated Jan. 31, 2026, Falls Twp. police located a newer Samsung cell phone with a cracked screen, Bensalem logged that Seibert had two cellphones on his person at the time of the arrest. Both had cracked screens. Seibert and Hiller continually spoke about needing to retrieve these cells phones from the prison. Through training and experience investigators alleged those involved in narcotic sales will keep a number of cell phones. One phone is often kept for their narcotic sales and the other is used for personal business.
In the closet of the same bedroom, authorities said, as described by CS#1. police located a green “Crown Royal” bag that contained a number of larger plastic bags containing smaller coin-sized plastic bags. In this same area police located a second newer Samsung phone with a cracked screen. This phone was on and through out the search, continued to make noise as if receiving phone calls and/or text messages. Through his training and experience he knew that those involved in narcotic sales will keep their business phone with the product and/or packaging to make the system of their sales more efficient.
Police also located a small black safe that appeared to have been broken open and empty.
Spread throughout the room police located a total of six large plastic zip top bags of marijuana. Some of these bags were full and half full. In the refrigerator in the kitchen, police located a large container of what appeared to be green butter. This substance, smells heavily of marijuana. It appeared that Hiller had already cooked the Keif into the butter as instructed by her boyfriend. On the stove in the kitchen Police located two trays of brownies. These brownies had the aroma of marijuana. It appeared that Hiller had already cooked the marijuana infused butter into the brownies as instructed by Seibert, police said in court records.
Both were scheduled for a preliminary hearing on March 17, however the hearings were postponed with no new court date scheduled as of publication time. Hiller has the retained the services of Law Offices Of Thomas Logan.
Seibert has retained David Harold Knight, Esq to represent him in court proceedings. He has a prior conviction for drug dealing dating back to 2022.
Logan said Friday new court dates are expected to be scheduled soon adding the hearing scheduled for two weeks ago was postponed due to a scheduling conflict.



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