BLACK GANGS: Organized Criminal GANGS | African American Mafia | Also MEXICANS | ISLANDERS

MEXICANS & Native Alaskans

Massive multi-state drug ring operated from Calif. prison leads to 16 indictments​

https://www.corrections1.com/invest...ted-from-calif-prison-leads-to-16-indictments

From a prison cell in California, federal prosecutors say a 56-year-old inmate directed an Alaska drug trafficking ring that in recent years smuggled huge quantities of fentanyl, heroin and methamphetamine​


November 08, 2023 12:56 PM

By Zachariah Hughes and Michelle Theriault Boots
Anchorage Daily News

ANCHORAGE, Alaska —From a prison cell in California, federal prosecutors allege, a 56-year-old inmate directed an Alaska drug trafficking ring that in recent years smuggled huge quantities of fentanyl, heroin and methamphetamine to some of the state’s smallest villages through a network of postal shippers and drug couriers.

In Alaska, meanwhile, a woman incarcerated at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center recruited a fellow inmate on the cusp of release to join the drug ring, federal prosecutors wrote in an indictment unsealed in October. That woman, the U.S. Attorney now alleges, quickly rose through the group’s ranks, culminating in what prosecutors say was the killing of two Alaska women near Trapper Creek at the behest of the enterprise’s leader in California.

The prosecutors contend that the group was both brutal and prolific: During a 15-month period members allegedly sent a staggering 58.5 kilograms of fentanyl — nearly 130 pounds — to Alaska communities, including villages as small as Savoonga and Tyonek. Last year, the Department of Public Safety’s Statewide Drug Enforcement unit seized 27 kilograms of fentanyl, less than half the amount law enforcement say was bound for Alaska when it was intercepted from people allegedly connected with the organization.

Now, a total of 16 people in Alaska and California have been charged across three federal criminal cases related to the alleged drug conspiracy and homicides, one filed in June and the others in October. Three of the defendants face a federal charge of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise, which carries a mandatory life sentence with conviction. Other defendants face charges ranging from money laundering to drug conspiracy to killing in the furtherance of continuing criminal enterprise.


While the allegations in the indictments have not yet been heard in court, the initial accounts by prosecutors paint a picture of how an organized drug ring operated to flood Alaska with potent drugs.

Several of the defendants have pleaded not guilty to charges. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Anchorage declined a request for an interview, and would not comment on the relationship between the three criminal cases filed in federal court, citing the Department of Justice’s media policy.

Lawyers representing several of those charged did not respond to emailed requests for comment on behalf of their clients.

The dynamics described in the cases follow a pattern seen often in Alaska, law enforcement officials say: Drugs produced outside the state are imported to the state via shipping, couriers or “anything else you can think of,” and then smuggled into smaller rural communities, where they can be sold at a markup, said Daron Cooper with the Alaska Department of Public Safety.


“Anchorage is generally the first stop for that product before it then grows legs and goes out to our outlying communities,” Cooper said.

Alaska’s drug market can be lucrative, with doses of methamphetamine, heroin and fentanyl selling for several times what they’d fetch on the streets of major West Coast cities. According to figures from the Alaska Department of Public Safety, a dose of fentanyl that might sell in Anchorage for $15 could be worth $40 in Utqiagvik, $80 in Kodiak, or $100 in Bethel. The smaller and more remote the community, the higher the price, according to the Department of Public Safety’s 2022 statewide drug report.

“The farther a drug or alcohol is trafficked from a regional hub the greater the retail price,” the report said.

All that gives organized, multi-state drug traffickers an incentive to operate in Alaska, said Anchorage’s Sandy Snodgrass.


Snodgrass lost her son to a fentanyl overdose in 2021, and has since lobbied for federal legislation called “Bruce’s Law” addressing the national opioid epidemic. She has spoken with lawmakers, public safety officials and community groups across Alaska. Bringing contraband into remote communities has always been lucrative, she said, but it’s only in the last year or two that she’s heard more about large quantities of fentanyl manufactured by organized criminal groups south of the border have started arriving.

“They are targeting rural communities in Alaska because of the price they can charge,” she said.

From a prison in California

The drug ring described in the federal indictments was operated out of a prison cell thousands of miles from Alaska, prosecutors assert.


Heraclio Sanchez-Rodriguez
was serving a lengthy prison sentence at California’s Salinas Valley Prison when, in 2022 and 2023, he allegedly used smuggled cellphones to communicate with suppliers in Mexico and partners in California to send drugs to Alaska, according to one of the federal indictments. Two of his daughters and his sister have been accused by federal prosecutors of helping him.

Reached by email, Sanchez-Rodriguez’s Yakima, Washington-based attorney Ken Therrien said he had no comment about his client’s case.

From prison, one of the indictments says, Sanchez-Rodriguez communicated with a woman in Alaska, Christina Quintana, 38, who was then an inmate at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River. Quintana was sentenced to 22 1/2 years on charges stemming from a violent robbery over a drug debt in Sitka in 2018. It isn’t clear why she was serving her sentence at Hiland, which typically incarcerates state prisoners. Sanchez-Rodriguez referred to Quintana as his “wife,” according to the indictment. It’s also not clear how Quintana was able to allegedly communicate with Sanchez-Rodriguez. Alaska Department of Corrections spokeswoman Betsy Holley referred questions to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. The indictment contends that Quintana was the main organizer of a criminal enterprise.

Quintana has pleaded not guilty to charges. Her attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

While at Hiland, federal prosecutors charge, Quintana recruited Tamara Bren, 41, who had lived in Anchorage and North Pole and was incarcerated on a drug-related charge. After she was released, Bren went from receiving drugs to acting as a “high ranking member of the conspiracy,” and was also referred to by Sanchez-Rodriguez as a “wife,” the indictment alleged. Federal prosecutors assert she was responsible for recruiting new people to smuggle drugs and for obtaining guns.

Bren has pleaded not guilty to charges. Her attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Each substance the group dealt had a codename, according to the indictment: “Blueberries” or “fetty” for fentanyl, which is often pressed into small blue pills; “agua” for methamphetamine; “choco” for heroin.

The group is accused of moving a lot of it: In 2022 and 2023, prosecutors say police intercepted at least 50 packages containing drugs sent by group members from California and Oregon to destinations in Alaska that included major hubs as well as small communities including Sitka, Dillingham, Ketchikan, Tyonek, Goodnews Bay, New Stuyahok, Savoonga and Togiak.

One shipment alone included 1,877 grams of fentanyl to Savoonga, a community of 826 people, an indictment said. Another shipment, in March 2023, bearing 1,593 grams of fentanyl, was bound for Tyonek, population 415.

During that same time, a group of Alaskans charged in the indictments with money laundering are accused of using services such as MoneyGram, Western Union and CashApp to send tens of thousands of dollars to people in Mexico, Arizona, California and Oregon and to smaller communities in Alaska such as Sand Point, for drug transactions.

Sanchez-Rodriguez, the California man prosecutors say was at the head of the arrangement, kept a “handwritten ledger in his prison cell documenting approximately $215,100 in additional wire transfers to him and his associates,” according to one of the indictments.

The quantities of drugs described in the indictments are larger than some statewide totals for all drugs intercepted last year. For perspective, in 2022, the Department of Public Safety’s Statewide Drug Enforcement Unit seized roughly 27 kilograms of fentanyl, 40 kilograms of heroin, and 81.6 kilograms of meth, according to an annual report.

Between the three drug conspiracy cases filed last week, prosecutors say they seized a total of 58.5 kilograms of fentanyl, 9 kilograms of heroin, and 39.5 kilograms of meth.

Trapper Creek killings

Prosecutors say the drug conspiracy turned deadly in June 2023 when, the indictment alleges, Sanchez-Rodriguez, Bren and a 29-year-old Anchorage man named Kevin Glenn Peterson II conspired to kidnap and kill two women, Kami Clark and Sunday Powers.

Peterson II has pleaded not guilty to charges. His attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to prosecutors, starting in March 2023, Sanchez-Rodriguez began communicating about the plan. In May, attorneys allege the three coordinated to meet up with Powers and Clark. At some point, federal prosecutors allege Bren and Peterson restrained the two women, drove them to a hidden location, and executed them with gunshots to the head before burying them “in a shallow grave near Trapper Creek,” according to the indictment.

The indictments do not say why Clark or Powers were targeted, or specify which of the indicted co-conspirators carried out which actions, charging all three of them with the murders.

Last week, the U.S. Attorney’s Office filed notice that it would not seek the death penalty for the killings of Clark and Sunday Powers.

Powers was first reported missing on May 24. Alaska State Troopers found her and Clark on June 2.

Little has been publicly shared about the women. Powers’ family asked for help in an online fundraiser bringing her body home to Fairbanks.

“Pray for Sunday,” a man who described himself as Powers’ brother wrote in the online fundraiser in June of this year. “Pray for my mother pray for my father and pray for our peace.”

________

©2023 Anchorage Daily News.
Visit at adn.com.
 

United States Attorney Northern District of Illinois Western Division

December 8, 2008
Darrell
"Duck" Davis controlled the drug trafficking activities of the Titanic Stones street gang in Rockford, also known as "The Brothers." Beginning in 2001, Davis recruited several Titanic Stones gang members from Chicago to com e to Rockford to assist in the sale of heroin and crack cocaine.
U.S. Department of Justice
United States Attorney
Northern District of Illinois
Western Division
Mark T. Karner 308 West State Street - Room 300 PH: (815) 987-4444
Assistant U.S. Attorney Rockford, Illinois 61101 FAX : (815) 987-4236
www.usdoj.gov/usao/iln
December 8, 2008
LAST REMAINING DEFENDANT SENTENCED TO FEDERAL PRISON
IN TITANIC STONES STREET GANG DRUG TRAFFICKING CASE
ROCKFORD -- PATRICK J. FITZGERALD, United States Attorney for the Northern
District of Illinois; ANDREW L. TRAVER, Special Agent-In-Charge of the Chicago Office of the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; ROBERT D. GRANT, Special Agent-In-
Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; RICHARD MEYERS,
Winnebago County Sheriff; and CHET EPPERSON, Chief of the Rockford Police Department,
today made the following announcement:
On Friday, December 5, 2008, United States District Judge Philip G. Reinhard sentenced the
last remaining defendant in the prosecution of the Titanic Stones street gang to federal prison for his
role in a conspiracy to distribute heroin and crack cocaine. Judge Reinhard sentenced JOEL
TURNER, JR. 28, of Rockford, to a total of 25 years in federal prison without parole for conspiracy
to distribute and possess with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine base (“crack”), as well as
possessing a firearm during a drug trafficking crime. Turner must also serve an 8 year period of
supervised release following his release from prison.
Turner pled guilty on July 28, 2008 and admitted that he participated in the conspiracy
between August 10, 2005 and August 22, 2005 by selling heroin from a drug house located at 1023
Kishwaukee Street, Rockford, Illinois. Evidence at the trial of codefendants’ Montrell McSwain,
Bradford Dodson and Lee Allen, and other plea agreements entered in the case, established that
Darrell “Duck” Davis controlled the drug trafficking activities of the Titanic Stones street gang in
Rockford, also known as “The Brothers.” Beginning in 2001, Davis recruited several Titanic Stones
gang members from Chicago to come to Rockford to assist in the sale of heroin and crack cocaine.
Members of the gang arranged for houses to be rented in other person’s names, usually females
associated with a gang member, then used those houses as distribution centers for the sale of the
drugs. The gang used firearms to protect their drugs, money, and drug houses from rival drug
dealers and rival gangs. The gang also fortified the drug houses’ doors with barrel bolts and 2" x
4" boards in order to make it more difficult for the police and rivals to get inside.
During the course of the conspiracy several Titanic Stones gang members were involved in
shootings with rival drug dealers and gangs.
To date, all 16 individuals charged as part of the conspiracy have been sentenced, as
summarized in the following chart:

Two Rockford Gang Members Sentenced to 21 Years and 15 Years in Federal Prison Without Parole on Federal Drug and Gun Charges


June 13 2007 - 4:37PM
PR Newswire (US)


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ROCKFORD, Ill., June 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- PATRICK J.FITZGERALD, United States Attorney for the Northern District ofIllinois; ANDREW L. TRAVER, Special Agent-In-Charge of the ChicagoOffice of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives;ROBERT D. GRANT, Special Agent-In- Charge of the Chicago Office ofthe Federal Bureau of Investigation; RICHARD MEYERS, WinnebagoCounty Sheriff; and CHET EPPERSON, Chief of the Rockford PoliceDepartment, today made the following announcement: Today, UnitedStates District Judge Philip G. Reinhard sentenced STEVEN P.EASTER, also known as "Little Steve," 23, of Rockford, Illinois,and JAMAUL R. McKAY, 20, of Chicago, Illinois, to federal prisonfor their roles in a conspiracy to distribute heroin and crackcocaine, as well as for possessing firearms in furtherance of adrug trafficking crime. Easter was sentenced to a total of 21 yearsin federal prison without parole (16 years for the drug conspiracycharge and 5 years for the firearms charge, to run consecutively),to be followed by 5 years of supervised release, and was ordered topay a $250 fine and a $200 special assessment. McKay was sentencedto a total of 15 years in federal prison without parole (10 yearsfor the drug conspiracy charge and 5 years for the firearms charge,to run consecutively), followed by 5 years of supervised release,and was ordered to pay a $250 fine, and a $200 special assessment.Easter pled guilty on September 19, 2006, to the drug traffickingconspiracy and possessing a firearm in furtherance of the drugconspiracy as charged in the indictment. McKay pled guilty to thedrug trafficking conspiracy and possessing a firearm in furtheranceof the drug conspiracy on February 8, 2007. In pleading guilty,Easter and McKay admitted that between at least 2001 to September13, 2005, they conspired with others to distribute more than onekilogram of heroin, and more than 50 grams of cocaine base("crack") in Rockford, Loves Park, and Chicago. According toEaster's plea agreement, Darrell "Duck" Davis controlled the drugtrafficking activities of the Titanic Stones street gang inRockford, also known as The Brothers. Beginning in 2001, Davisrecruited several Titanic Stones gang members from Chicago to cometo Rockford to assist in the sale of heroin and crack cocaine.Members of the gang, including Steven Easter, arranged for housesto be rented in other person's names, usually females associatedwith a gang member, then used those houses as distribution centersfor the sale of the drugs. Many of the drug houses were fortifiedwith barrel bolts, steel brackets, and 2" x 4" boards on the doorswhich made it more difficult for rival gangs and/or the police toenter. The Titanic Stones gang members used Nextel cell phones witha walkie talkie feature to discuss drug trafficking, using termssuch as "cereal," "happy meal," and "demo" to refer to drugs. Theplea agreement further states the gang used firearms to protecttheir drugs, money, and drug houses from rival drug dealers andrival gangs. According to the plea agreement, during the course ofthe conspiracy, several Titanic Stones gang members were involvedin shootings with rival drug dealers and gangs. Easter and McKaywere the third and fourth defendants to be sentenced out of a totalof 16 individuals charged in the conspiracy. On December 8, 2006,CAMERON P. LEMON, 25, formerly of Chicago, was sentenced to 10years in federal prison without parole for conspiracy to distributeand possess with intent to distribute heroin and crack cocaine. OnFebruary 8, 2007, SYLVIA M. DAVENPORT, 27, formerly of Rockford,was sentenced to 70 months in federal prison without parole forconspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distributeheroin and crack cocaine. Eleven other defendants are scheduled tobe sentenced, as follows: DARRELL D. DAVIS, also known as "Duck,"27, 536 Lawn Drive, Loves Park, Illinois, pled guilty on November14, 2006, to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent todistribute heroin and crack cocaine, as well as to possessing afirearm in furtherance of the drug conspiracy. Davis is scheduledto be sentenced on July 13, 2007, at 10:00 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. AMBROSE L. JONES,also known as "Brose," 25, 1832 N. Main Street, Rockford, Illinois,pled guilty on September 13, 2006, to conspiracy to distribute andpossess with intent to distribute heroin and crack cocaine, as wellas to possessing a firearm in furtherance of the drug conspiracy.Jones is scheduled to be sentenced on August 3, 2007, at 10:30 a.m.He is being held in federal custody without bail pendingsentencing. ANTHONY K. GLOVER, also known as "Bones," 24, 1420 12thStreet, Rockford, Illinois, pled guilty on April 27, 2007, toconspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distributeheroin and crack cocaine, as well as to possessing a firearm infurtherance of the drug conspiracy. Glover is scheduled to besentenced on August 24, 2007, at 10:00 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. MONTRELL McSWAIN,also known as "Trell," 26, Loves Park, Illinois, was found guiltyon May 23, 2007 after a jury trial of conspiracy to distribute andpossess with intent to distribute heroin and crack cocaine, as wellas to possessing a firearm in furtherance of the drug conspiracy.McSwain is scheduled to be sentenced on September 14, 2007, at 9:30a.m. He is being held in federal custody without bail pendingsentencing. DUPREE L. TURNER, also known as "Joe," "Joey," and"Duke," 22, 5023 Champlain Street, Chicago, Illinois, pled guiltyon October 6, 2006, to conspiracy to distribute and possess withintent to distribute heroin and crack cocaine, as well as topossessing a firearm in furtherance of the drug conspiracy. Turneris scheduled to be sentenced on August 3, 2007, at 9:00 a.m. He isbeing held in federal custody without bail pending sentencing.BOBBY L. HARRIS, also known as "David," and "B.O.," 22, 7851 S.Marshfield, Chicago, Illinois, pled guilty on September 13, 2006,to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distributeheroin and crack cocaine, as well as to possessing a firearm infurtherance of the drug conspiracy. Harris is scheduled to besentenced on July 27, 2007, at 11:00 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. BRADFORD V.DODSON, also known as "Brad" and "Hustler," 26, Rockford, Illinois,was found guilty on May 23, 2007 after a jury trial of conspiracyto distribute and possess with intent to distribute heroin andcrack cocaine, as well as three counts of possessing a firearm infurtherance of a drug trafficking crime. Dodson is scheduled to besentenced on October 18, 2007, at 9:00 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. FLOYD R. MURRAY,22, 6937 South Harper, Chicago, Illinois, pled guilty on August 25,2006, to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent todistribute heroin and crack cocaine. Murray is scheduled to besentenced on July 27, 2007, at 10:30 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. JAMEAH M. FLINT,23, 1534 Chestnut Street, Rockford, Illinois, pled guilty on May 9,2007, to aiding and abetting the drug trafficking conspiracy. Flintis scheduled to be sentenced on September 6, 2007, at 9:30 a.m. Sheis being held in federal custody without bail pending sentencing.CLINTON W. ALLEN, also known as "Clint," 42, 818 12th Street,Rockford, Illinois pled guilty on September 21, 2006, to aiding andabetting the drug trafficking conspiracy. Allen is scheduled to besentenced on August 3, 2007, at 11:00 a.m. He is being held infederal custody without bail pending sentencing. LEE S. ALLEN, 41,3434 Edvera Drive, Rockford, Illinois, was found guilty on May 23,2007 after a jury trial of aiding and abetting the drug traffickingconspiracy. Allen is scheduled to be sentenced on October 16, 2007,at 9:30 a.m. Allen remains on bond pending sentencing. Theremaining defendant, Joel Turner, Jr., is facing first degreemurder charges in Winnebago County Circuit Court, and has notappeared in federal court on these charges. The case wasinvestigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms andExplosives (ATF), the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the RockfordPolice Department, the Winnebago County Sheriff's Department, andthe Rockford- Winnebago County Metro Narcotics Unit. The case isbeing prosecuted in federal court by Assistant United StatesAttorneys Michael F. Iasparro and Mark T. Karner. Michael F.Iasparro, PH: (815) 987-4444 Assistant U.S. Attorney FAX : (815)987-4236 DATASOURCE: United States Attorney for the NorthernDistrict of Illinois, Western CONTACT: Michael F. Iasparro,Assistant U.S. Attorney, PH: +1-815-987-4444, FAX: +1-815-987-4236Web site: http://www.atf.gov/

NOT THAT MANY YEARS AGO.....

 
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A native of the Dominican Republic & a MEXICAN

Man caught with 9 pounds of heroin in 2016, who fled the U.S. but was extradited, sentenced to 6.5 years in prison​


https://triblive.com/author/quincey-reese/
Quincey Reese| Wednesday, April 24, 2024 10:55 p.m.

A native of the Dominican Republic who was caught with 9 pounds of heroin in 2016 but escaped back to his homeland only to be extradited was sentenced this week for his crimes.

Habys Omar Meran, 38, was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in federal prison for possession of drugs with intent to distribute.

Meran was pulled over by a state trooper who specializes in drug interdiction during a traffic stop along Interstate 80 in Mercer County in January 2016. The trooper found the heroin — valued more than $2 million — in “a sophisticated, hydraulically activated hidden compartment” of Meran’s van, according to a new release from U.S. Attorney Eric Olshan in Pittsburgh.

Meran, who was living in New York City with his passenger, Juan Wilquin Hernandez-Bourdier, were both charged with possession of a controlled substance, possession with intent to deliver, conspiracy and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Hernandez-Bourdier was convicted of all charges in December 2018, Olshan said. He is serving a 10-year sentence in federal prison.

Meran managed to remove his ankle monitor and flee the country in November 2017 prior to his trial, Olshan said. Following an investigation by the U.S. Marshals Service, Meran was arrested in the Dominican Republic in 2023 and extradited to the United States.

The Department of Homeland Security, state police and the Drug Enforcement Administration assisted with the investigation, Olshan said.
 
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BLACKS

Gangster Disciples and Sisters of the Struggle Members Sentenced for Gang-Related Murders​


Thursday, March 21, 2024
For Immediate Release
Office of Public Affairs

A high-ranking member of the Gangster Disciples and a leader of its parallel female organization, the Sisters of the Struggle (SOS), were sentenced yesterday for their roles in a murder conspiracy stemming from gang-related retribution that resulted in the shooting deaths of three men.
Philmon Deshawn Chambers, also known as Dolla Phil, 35, of Atlanta, was sentenced to serve two consecutive life terms in prison plus 10 years in prison. Andrea Paige Browner, also known as Drea, 29, of Athens, Georgia, was sentenced to serve two concurrent sentences of 30 years in prison.

According to court documents, Chambers held a “Position of Authority” within the national Gangster Disciples criminal organization, which included overseeing members of the “Enforcement Team.” Enforcement teams within the Gangster Disciples are directed to discipline gang members for violations of gang rules through physical assault or murder. Co-defendant Lesley Chappell Green, also known as Grip, 35, of Stone Mountain, Georgia, was a member of the Enforcement Team and held the title of “Assistant Chief Enforcer.”

On Dec. 10, 2018, a Gangster Disciples member was murdered in Athens. Chambers and Browner sought retaliation for the member’s death and believed three unnamed Athens residents were responsible. On Dec. 14, 2018, Browner met an individual at a downtown Athens motel and learned that he was related to one of the individuals she believed killed the Gangster Disciples member. Browner sent text messages directing Chambers to travel to the motel, which he did. Chambers then followed the individual home and shot and killed him. Browner notified a Gangster Disciples associate that she and Chambers would be leaving town because the police would be looking for them.

On Dec. 15, 2018, Browner was taken into custody in Mt. Enterprise, Texas; however, Chambers, who had been in the vehicle with Browner, fled from law enforcement. Chambers was suspicious that someone was cooperating with law enforcement, and incorrectly concluded that two individuals were “snitches.” Chambers directed Green to carry out the murders of those two individuals. The two individuals were lured by Green, as directed by Chambers, to drive from Athens to Lawrenceville, Georgia, to break into storage sheds and steal items to send to Chambers as “aid and assistance” as he was hiding out from law enforcement in a Gangster Disciple “safe house” in Killeen, Texas. On Dec. 19, 2018, the two individuals were murdered and their bodies were concealed in the storage unit. Chambers and Green, along with Robert Maurice Carlisle, also known as Different, 37, of Lithonia, Georgia, and Shabazz Larry Guidry, (SHABAZZ is a fake name adopted by Nation of Islam & its members) also known as Lil Larry, 29, of Decatur, Georgia, conspired to dispose of the victims’ bodies, which included potentially burning the bodies or dumping the bodies in a landfill.
A federal jury convicted Chambers in August 2023 of racketeer influenced and corruption organization (RICO) conspiracy, murder in aid of racketeering, carry and use of a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, and causing the death of a person using a firearm. Browner was also convicted in August 2023 of RICO conspiracy, murder in aid of racketeering, and causing the death of a person using a firearm.
Carlisle and Guidry both pleaded guilty on June 8, 2023, to RICO conspiracy and are scheduled to be sentenced on March 22. Green was sentenced on Feb. 20 to life in prison after a federal jury convicted him on Aug. 17, 2023, of RICO conspiracy.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Peter D. Leary for the Middle District of Georgia; Supervisory Senior Special Agent Robert Gibbs of FBI Atlanta Field Office; and Chief Jerry Saulters of the Athens-Clarke County Police Department made the announcement.
The FBI Athens Resident Agency Middle Georgia Safe Streets Gang Task Force, Athens-Clarke County Police Department, and Gwinnett County Police Department investigated the case.
Trial Attorney Kenneth Kaplan, formerly of the Criminal Division’s Violent Crime and Racketeering Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Morrison for the Middle District of Georgia are prosecuting the case, with assistance from Assistant U.S. Attorney Stuart Walker for the Middle District of Georgia.
This case is being prosecuted as part of the joint federal, state, and local Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) Program, the centerpiece of the Justice Department’s violent crime reduction efforts. PSN is an evidence-based program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry programs for lasting reductions in crime.

Updated March 21, 2024
 
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KILLEEN'S BLACKS​

Man who was part of Gangster Disciples now facing drug, gun charges in Harker Heights​



Jomar Kenyatta Bush


Jomar Kenyatta Bush

After serving a five-year federal sentence for possessing more than 500 grams of methamphetamine while a member of a Killeen street gang in 2018, a man now is under indictment in Bell County after police allegedly found a variety of illegal drugs and firearms during a narcotics operation earlier this year.
On Wednesday, Jomar Kenyatta Bush, 50, of Harker Heights was indicted by a Bell County grand jury on a first-degree felony charge of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance four grams or more but less than 200 grams and a third-degree felony charge of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon.
Bush was being held in the Bell County Jail on Thursday with bonds totaling $105,000, on the two charges. Jail records show that he was booked on Feb. 3.

On Jan. 31, at around 10:23 p.m., a Heights police officer “received information that a blue Honda Civic, license plate ending in 7629, left a residence in the 200 block of West Cardinal Drive where law enforcement was conducting surveillance for narcotics trafficking,” according to an arrest affidavit. The officer “located the Honda traveling in the 800 block of West Knight’s Way (in) Heights. (The officer) observed the driver of the Honda fail to reduce his speed 20 miles per hour below the posted speed limit as he passed utility trucks working on the power lines, a violation of...the Texas Transportation Code.”

The officer said he “immediately smelled the odor of marijuana emitting from the vehicle as he made contact with the sole occupant driver, Bush,” police said. “A plastic baggie containing a crystal-like substance fell to the found as Bush exited the vehicle.”

During a search of the Honda, officers said they located “another clear plastic baggie containing a large quantity of a crystal-like substance; several baggies of marijuana; psilocybin mushrooms; a baggie containing Xanax bars weighing 16.9 grams; and a small baggie of ecstasy pills weighing two grams,” according to the affidavit. “The crystal-like substances were tested with a reliable field test kit and the result was presumptively positive for methamphetamine that weighed 145.7 grams.”

Following the arrest, other officers obtained a search warrant for Bush’s apartment in the 200 block of West Cardinal Lane.

“Officers found (a woman) inside the residence and served her with the search warrant,” according to an arrest affidavit. “Officers executed the search warrant on the residence and found ... a shotgun near the front door, a stolen 9-mm handgun hidden in a bag of dog food, drug paraphernalia, a plastic baggie containing a crystal-like substance in Bush’s sock drawer, and baggies of marijuana.”

Bush was among eight Killeen-based members of the street gang Gangster Disciples who were indicted by a federal grand jury on Aug. 14, 2018. Bush pleaded guilty on Nov. 27, 2018, to one count of “conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine.”

He was sentenced on Aug. 28, 2019, to 60 months in federal prison with credit for time served, according to court records. Bush is on supervised release until April 7, 2027.
 
 



Heist gang behind brazen Los Angeles daylight robberies of millions from armored trucks busted​



By
Social Links for Megan Palin



Published April 29, 2024, 4:07 p.m. ET





WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES






A string of daring daylight heists in Los Angeles where gang members held up armored trucks at gunpoint and got away with millions of dollars had played out like a Hollywood movie — but were recently busted by cops.
The sophisticated, lightning-quick robberies took place across the city over the last two years, with the thieves — clad in ski masks and brandishing AR-15 assault weapons — targeting vehicles picking up or delivering bags of cash at banks, fast-food restaurants, markets and credit unions.
When the time came to strike, the so-called “Chesapeake Bandits” — now linked to the Crips and Black P Stone gangs — would force security guards to the ground at gunpoint, zip-tie them, and grab wads of bills from the armored vehicle before fleeing within a matter of seconds.
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
The heavily armed thieves wore ski masks and, on occasion, “security” shirts. fbi.gov
The Los Angeles Police Department and the FBI, who jointly investigated the crimes, now believe the group planned the robberies from a home on Chesapeake Avenue in the West Adams neighborhood of Los Angeles, earning their nickname, The Los Angeles Times reported.

FBI assistant director in charge of the Los Angeles office, Donald Alway, said the criminals would conduct surveillance on targeted locations using multiple vehicles and personnel in the lead up to the precision heists.



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NYC firefighter, 36, dies of heart attack after being fired to pay for migrants — leaving family with nothing








The group had drivers who would remain in their vehicles during the robberies, he added.
“The defendants in this case and the other co-conspirators are heavily armed and pointed their weapons at the victims,” which in each case were security guards, US Attorney Martin Estrada said at a news conference at the FBI’s LA headquarters in Westwood last month.
Several of the suspects had met each other while serving time in state prison, according to court records.
Federal prosecutors last year charged two of the key suspects involved in the heists: half-brothers Deneyvous Hobson, 36, and James Russell Davis, 34.
According to a search warrant affidavit, Davis is a member of the West Boulevard Crips, while Hobson is affiliated the Black P Stones.
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
This suspect, seen in a CCTV footage, is wanted for a series of armored car robberies between February 2022 and February 2023. fbi.gov
However, the group’s signature crime sprees continued while those suspected ringleaders were jailed. Another suspect was later found dead in suspicious circumstances and a fourth was killed by police while fleeing a raid.
The crew is believed to have first struck in February 2022 when three of its members approached an armored car driver picking up cash from a Wescom Credit Union in Hawthorne. He forced the guard to the ground at gunpoint, FBI Special Agent Elizabeth Cardenas wrote in an affidavit.
They grabbed bags of cash, checks and the victim’s weapon after taking it from the holster and fled in a white Honda Accord with $166,640, according to court records obtained by The Post.
But that was just the beginning.
Over the next year, the crew held up armored car drivers outside a Bank of America branch in Inglewood, a 99 Cents Only Store on Crenshaw Boulevard and a check-cashing business at the intersection of La Brea Avenue and Adams Boulevard, according to the affidavit.
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
Surveillance cameras catch the suspects during an armed robbery at a Bank of America branch in Inglewood on June 9, 2022. fbi.gov
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
They got away with bags of money, sometimes within a matter of seconds. fbi.gov
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
Surveillance footage showed the thieves in action. fbi.gov
In June 2023, a Brinks armored car pulled into the parking lot of a 7-Eleven at the intersection of Florence Avenue and Crenshaw Boulevard.
As he returned with the money, a man wearing a white jumpsuit stepped out of a white Lexus SUV holding a rifle, Detective Emily Delph of the LAPD Robbery-Homicide Division wrote in a search warrant affidavit.
He pushed the worker to the ground and took the money while a second suspect aimed a rifle on the driver inside the truck. “Let’s go!” the driver of the Lexus shouted. “Hurry up!”
Less than three weeks later, the bandits held up another Brinks driver — this time at a Taco Bell.
One of the suspects wore a white painter suit and trained an AR-15 at the driver before he handed over his keys to one of the accomplices and they took off in the truck, which was later found abandoned.
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
The bandits targeted armored vehicles on deliveries and pick-ups from various banks and fast-food restaurants. fbi.gov
In the final heist connected to the group, a Brinks driver was robbed while filling ATMs in South Los Angeles the morning of Oct. 16.
According Delph investigators also linked Hobson and Davis to a Jadie Lee Young Jr, a 30-year-old member of the West Boulevard Crips. He’d served 12 years in prison for assault and had been contacted by the pair during the robberies.
Delph wrote in a search warrant affidavit which phone records showed Young had also been near the site of some of the robberies when they occurred.
However, before he could be arrested Young’s body was found December 20 last year on the side of a road in Inglewood with a bullet wound to his head. His death is being investigated by the LAPD.
In her affidavit, Delph said she discovered Young had been communicating with another person during the robberies on a number registered to Zeff Rocco, an East Coast Crip who’d done prison time for carjacking.
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
The thieves were heavily armed during the heists. fbi.gov
security cam footage of one of the heists  8
One victim described a gun pointed at him as a “sub-machine”. fbi.gov
Investigators found further evidence which linked him to the heists and on March 21 this year, a SWAT team gathered at a Reseda Boulevard apartment building to serve a search and arrest warrant on the suspect.
“Zeff Rocco, this is the LAPD!” an officer shouted, according to body camera footage released last week.
“Come out with your hands up and surrender immediately!”
LAPD said they also made contact with the suspect by phone and instructed him to come outside and surrender.
Moments later, Rocco jumped from his third-floor apartment armed with an assault rifle. He momentarily dropped the gun while trying to get away and went to reach for it, according to surveillance footage. Police repeatedly warned him to “let it go” before shooting him dead.
According to the LAPD, the rifle Rocco carried was a semiautomatic Ghost Gun, the department said in a statement.



Later that day, detectives arrested Disaac Jones, 33, after his DNA was found on a glove left inside the getaway car used in one of the heists, according to Delph’s affidavit.


He pleaded not guilty to two counts of robbery and was released on $150,000 bond.


Davis pleaded guilty in February to robbery and gun charges, admitting he cased the Wescom Credit Union and acted as a lookout, according to The Los Angeles Times report.


He faces a minimum of 10 years when he is sentenced in June. Hobson has pleaded not guilty and is set to stand trial in September.
 
Young had been communicating with another person during the robberies on a number registered to Zeff Rocco, an East Coast Crip
Several of the suspects had met each other while serving time in state prison, according to court records.
Federal prosecutors last year charged two of the key suspects involved in the heists: half-brothers Deneyvous Hobson, 36, and James Russell Davis, 34.
According to a search warrant affidavit, Davis is a member of the West Boulevard Crips, while Hobson is affiliated the Black P Stones.
Anyways....

Mexicans, Sinaloa cartel

Phoenix Man Convicted of in Four Cartel-Related Murders that Left Three Men Shot to Death, Set on Fire in Residential Neighborhood in Middle of Day​

April 29, 2024 6:00 pm

A fourth man was discovered shot to death in Fontana; killers recorded him dying.
SANTA ANA, Calif. – A 33-year-old Phoenix man has been convicted of murdering four men in a failed attempt to take over the drug business that left three of the men shot to death, their bodies set on fire inside of a burning car left abandoned in a residential neighborhood in Orange in the middle of the day in 2015. The body of a fourth man was found inside of a car in Fontana six days after he was shot to death; his killers recorded his dying moments on a cell phone.
Raul Gastellum Flores, 33, of Phoenix, was convicted by a jury Monday of four felony counts of first-degree murder, four special circumstances of murder during the commission of a robbery, and four special circumstances of multiple murders.

He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole. He is scheduled to be sentenced July 19, 2024.

Two other defendants charged in connection with the murders remain wanted on warrants, a third, Rosario Adan Roman-Lopez, who orchestrated the hit, is believed to have been murdered in Mexico in retribution for the murders, and a fourth was a cooperating witness.

Rosario Roman-Lopez is accused of orchestrating the murders in retaliation for Edgar and Joel Berrelleza’s decision to cut him out of their drug dealing business run by the Sinaloa Cartel. Flores was recruited by Roman-Lopez to help carry out the murders, traveling from Phoenix, Arizona to Orange County CA with several handguns and Ak-47s to steal tens of thousands of dollars from the Berrelleza brothers, and to murder them if they refused to pay.

On November 9, 2015, Orange police were called to a burning SUV on Oakmont Street just after 2 p.m. Bystanders were attempting to put out the fire with a garden hose. After the firefighters extinguished the fire, officers discovered two men deceased in the back seat and a third man deceased in the front passenger seat. All three men had been shot multiple times. Fernando Meza had his hands bound and he had also been stabbed several times. Edgar Berrelleza had been shot in the head and the back and Antonio Medina had been shot in the head.

Surveillance video captured the SUV on fire as the driver jumped from the vehicle before it slowly rolled to a stop. The driver got into a waiting sedan and left the burning vehicle with the three bodies inside.

Earlier that day Raul Flores and several accomplices went to an apartment in Orange where they intercepted Medina, Meza, and Edgar Berrelleza, by holding them up at gunpoint and forcing their way into the car. Raul Flores and two other gunmen held the three men hostage while waiting for orders from Roman-Lopez. Flores called Roman-Lopez who told Flores he knew what needed to be done. Meza and Medina were shot multiple times in the head and chest, while Flores drove the SUV. Edgar was then shot in the head and back multiple times. After the murders, the other accomplices exited the SUV and got into another vehicle. Flores continued to drive the stolen SUV with the three bodies inside until he reached Oakmont Street in Orange, where he set the car on fire, causing the car to catch fire while he was still behind the wheel. He jumped from the moving vehicle as it continued to burn with the bodies inside and escaped to the waiting sedan. Meza was still alive when the fire was started and soot was found in his lungs. He later died as a result of the gunshot wounds and fire.

Flores then went to an apartment in Orange where Roman-Lopez and other accomplices had kidnapped and tied up Joel Berrelleza, Edgar’s brother. Roman-Lopez and other accomplices stole safes, money, and over $60,000 worth of heroin from the apartment. Flores and another accomplice forced Joel Berrelleza into his Pontiac where he was shot three times as they drove and recorded his dying breaths on a cell phone. His body was left inside his vehicle in Fontana for six days until a passerby called police to report a man had been sleeping inside the vehicle for several days.

“These murders were calculated to inflict the maximum amount of terror not only on their victims, but also on the neighbors and first responders who had to witness the absolute horror that was unleashed on their neighborhood,” said Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer. “This was someone who took absolute pleasure in carrying out these killings.”

Senior Deputy District Attorney Harris Siddiq of the Homicide Unit is prosecuting this case.
 
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