CAMDEN, New Jersey—Twenty-five people
associated with a criminal street gang that allegedly used threats,
intimidation, and violence to maintain control of the illegal drug trade
in Atlantic City were arrested today in pre-dawn raids by agents of the
FBI, the New Jersey State Police, and officers of the Atlantic City
Police Department, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.
The arrests deal a significant blow to the
criminal street gang known as “Dirty Block,” a/k/a “Crime Fam,”
“3.6.6.12,” or “3.6,” which allegedly operates in a geographic area of
Atlantic City that includes the public housing apartment complexes of
Stanley Holmes, Carver Hall, Schoolhouse, Adams Court, and Cedar Court.
The defendants are scheduled to make their initial court appearances
this afternoon before U.S. Magistrate Judges Ann Marie Donio and Karen
M. Williams in Camden federal court.
“The defendants in this case created an
atmosphere of fear and presented real danger to the people who shared
their Atlantic City neighborhood,” U.S. Attorney Fishman said. “And they
did it so that they could prosper from selling illegal drugs. The
law-abiding people of New Jersey—whether they live in the suburbs, on a
farm, or in the oldest housing project in New Jersey—deserve to have
neighborhoods that are safe places to walk and raise their families. I
really hope that today’s arrests will give them that chance.”
FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge David
Velazquez said, “The Dirty Block gang had placed a community under siege
and extraordinary law enforcement efforts became necessary. The
collaboration of federal, state, and local law enforcement authorities
have made possible the return of the community to its people.”
Acting Atlantic County Prosecutor James P.
McClain said, “This operation has been an excellent example of how
cooperating law enforcement can take down a criminal organization and
therefore make our community safer. In Atlantic County, we will continue
to work with all other available law enforcement agencies to take down
those criminal groups that remain or those that might spring up to
replace this one.”
The 25 defendants arrested today are among
34 people charged by complaint—including two brothers who have already
been arrested and charged in connection with Atlantic City’s first
homicide of 2013 and several defendants already in custody—with
participating in a conspiracy to distribute heroin since at least
October 2012.
According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:
An investigation using surveillance,
confidential informants, controlled drug purchases, record checks, and
telephone wiretaps revealed that Dirty Block acquires and distributes
heroin, cocaine, and prescription drugs; maintains various stash houses
and drug dens; and possesses numerous illegal firearms to maintain
control of drug distribution and to intimidate, threaten, and kill
rivals.
Intercepted telephone conversations reveal
that two of the principal targets charged today—Mykal Derry, a/k/a
“Koose,” and his brother Malik Derry, a/k/a “Lik”—conspired to murder a
rival drug dealer, Tyquinn James, a/k/a “T.Y.,” and that on February 10,
2013, Malik Derry allegedly carried out the homicide. The two brothers
were arrested on February 11, 2013. The intercepted conversations also
describe an incident at the Tropicana Casino on December 24, 2012, in
which members of the Dirty Block gang spotted members of a rival gang
and attempted to obtain weapons in order to ambush them before they left
the casino. Failing that, they chased down and violently assaulted
their rivals.
The Dirty Block drug trafficking
organization utilizes many people who performed various functions to
facilitate the enterprise. These include narcotics suppliers (who sell
bulk quantities of heroin at discounted prices), gang leaders (such as
Mykal Derry and Tyrone Ellis, a/k/a “Rome”), enforcers or “shooters,”
distributors, dealers, runners, couriers, facilitators (who provide
cars, phones, locations, and money laundering services), and testers
(who ingest narcotics, at the request of a distributor, in order to
assess quality).
Mykal Derry, a Dirty Block gang leader and
mid-level heroin distributor, has used several conspirators, who are
also charged in the complaint, to store drugs, money, and weapons in
their homes and to acquire narcotics from higher-level suppliers for
distribution in the Atlantic City area. Derry distributed more than a
kilogram of heroin to street buyers in quantities referred to as
“bricks” (or “walls”), “bundles,” and “bands” (or “rubber bands”). This
heroin was marketed using numerous “stamps” that suppliers,
distributors, and dealers use to brand their product.
Mykal Derry, along with Ellis, and their
conspirators frequently possessed firearms, despite prior felony
convictions prohibiting such possession, in furtherance of the
conspiracy’s goals. On two separate occasions in October 2012, Derry and
other co-conspirators—all previously convicted felons—photographed
themselves, and were observed and video recorded, holding, loading, and
using firearms at the Shore Shot shooting range in Lakewood, New Jersey.
Defendants Maurice Thomas and Mark Frye
were the primary heroin suppliers to Mykal Derry and Tyrone Ellis,
providing them with more than a thousand bricks of heroin between
October 2012 and February 2013. Wiretaps revealed that Derry and Ellis
are but two of Thomas’ and Frye’s customers. Thomas and Frye are
believed to be leaders of a sophisticated drug trafficking organization
that has multiple lines of supply and uses multiple subjects who meet
with customers and distribute large quantities of heroin from multiple
tower style apartment buildings on multiple floors. Thomas and Frye were
both intercepted over the wiretaps arranging and conducting drug
transactions with both Derry and Ellis.
Following Hurricane Sandy in late October
2012, conspirators defrauded the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) by lying about the extent of damage they sustained and provided
an address for the receipt of FEMA disaster relief funds that was a
storage location used for drug trafficking.
Dirty Block was able to secure the release
of its members from prison with the services of a corrupt bail
bondsman, identified in the complaint as “P.J.L.,” who is employed at
Rapid Bail Bonds in Atlantic City. P.J.L. assisted Mykal Derry and other
Dirty Block members by procuring fraudulent evidence of employment in
order for individuals to act as co-signers of bonds. Derry also has
provided P.J.L. with heroin, which intercepted communications reveal was
used by P.J.L. for resale.
Despite its specialization in the supply
of heroin, Dirty Block members abused various prescription medications
and occasionally supplied cocaine as well. On one occasion, one of Mykal
Derry’s couriers, Ambrin Qureshi, advised him that she had access to
Roxicet prescription medication: “My peoples got a line on pure Roxy
straight from the pharmaceutical company, uncut. Raw...”
Intercepted communications also revealed
the fascination of several conspirators with “The Wire,” the popular HBO
series (2002 to 2008) about the wiretap of a Baltimore-based drug
conspiracy. In one conversation between Mykal Derry and his younger
brother Malik, Mykal said that he was watching “The Wire” at the time,
to which Malik responded that he, too, was watching “The Wire,” and,
like Mykal, had “all the seasons.”
U.S. Attorney Fishman credited special
agents of the FBI’s Newark Division, Atlantic City Resident Agency,
under the direction of Acting Special Agent in Charge Velazquez; the
Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office, under the direction of Acting
Prosecutor McClain; the Atlantic City Police Department, under the
direction of Police Chief Ernest Jubilee and Public Safety Director
William R. Glass; and the South Jersey Safe Streets Violent Incident and
Gang (Safe Streets) Task Force, with the investigation leading to
today’s arrests.
He also thanked the New Jersey State
Police; the Atlantic County Sheriff’s Office; the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; the Northfield Police Department; the
Vineland Police Department; the Brigantine Police Department; the
Millville Police Department; the Mullica Township Police Department; the
South Jersey Transportation Authority; and the U.S. Secret Service for
their contributions.
The government is represented by Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Patrick C. Askin and Justin C. Danilewitz of the U.S.
Attorney’s Office Criminal Division in Camden.
The charges and allegations contained in
the complaint are merely accusations, and the defendants are considered
innocent unless and until proven guilty.
Defendants:
Name |
Age
|
Residence
|
Role
|
Ibn Abdullah |
20
|
Pleasantville, New Jersey |
Enforcer/dealer
|
Kamal Allen |
25
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Enforcer/dealer |
Rashada Allen |
26
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Facililtator |
Kareem Bailey |
19
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/youngin’
|
Wanda Bishop |
32
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor |
Wallace Boston |
61
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer |
Jodi Brown |
40
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Facilitator/dealer/tester |
Latasha Cherry |
29
|
Millville, New Jersey |
Facilitator/courier |
Ronald Davis |
27
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer |
Terry Davis |
24
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Enforcer/dealer |
Malik Derry |
22
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Enforcer/distributor |
Mykal Derry |
32
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Leader/distributor |
Quasim Duncan |
19
|
Mays Landing, New Jersey |
Dealer
|
Tyrone Ellis |
31
|
Galloway, New Jersey |
Leader/distributor |
Mark Frye |
32
|
Paterson, New Jersey |
Supplier |
Jeffrey Harvey |
28
|
Collings Lakes, New Jersey |
Distributor |
Kasan Hayes |
26
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/runner/youngin’
|
Ronald Johnson |
29
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor
|
|
|
|
|
Raymond Mack |
19
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/youngin’
|
Lamar Macon |
24
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/runner/youngin’
|
Ambrin Qureshi |
32
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Courier/runner/facilitator
|
Franklin Simms |
29
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor/facilitator
|
Kimberly Spellman |
31
|
Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey |
Courier/runner/facilitator
|
Laquay Spence |
22
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/runner/youngin’
|
Shaamel Spencer |
29
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Enforcer/dealer
|
Rayshell Strong |
32
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor/courier/facilitator
|
Patricia Taylor |
33
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor
|
Maurice Thomas |
31
|
Paterson, New Jersey
|
Supplier
|
Aree Toulson |
24
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor
|
Dwayne Townsend |
19
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/runner/youngin’
|
Tiarrah Turner |
23
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Courier
|
Dominique Venable |
23
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Dealer/runner/youngin’
|
Kareem Young |
20
|
Absecon, New Jersey |
Dealer/youngin’
|
Saeed Zaffa |
23
|
Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Distributor
|
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