I am not sure of those details, I do know he ratted his two friends out in order to get probation, and he was represented by Rick Collins.
Then he most likely will not have a felony record (unless it is for other shit). If his record is clean (mostly) he won't see any jail time. As I stated, it is easy to prove this is a victimless crime in part because customers willingly purchased the products and no one basically died.
In all honesty, I have not read the indictment, but unless there are other charges associated with it that they can prove - money laundering, wire transfer fraud, income tax evasion, etc.. (which are the usual ones that you always see attached to these kind of busts and charges), PJ would have been better off just going ahead and pleading guilty right away and trying to keep most of his money. I haven't seen anyone mention it, but it appears he avoided the most common fuck up charges that dealers and labs get hit with - having firearms around and/or rec drugs.