News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: August 7, 2012
Contact: Rich Isaacson
Number: (313) 234-4310
Twelve
People Indicted in Ohio Cocaine Conspiracy
Cocaine Flown from Texas
to Cleveland Aboard Private Chartered Aircraft
Twelve
defendants have been indicted in a major
drug trafficking conspiracy in which large
shipments of cocaine were flown by private
chartered airplanes from Texas to Cleveland,
federal law enforcement officials announced
today.
At
least 24 kilograms of cocaine and $157,500
in cash were seized as part of the investigation.
The conspiracy, which also included shipments
of cocaine to Cleveland from Atlanta and
a suburb of Chicago, included nearly 20 flights
between August 2009 and March 2012, according
to the indictment.
Those
indicted are:
Johnny S. Phillips, aka “Nasty” or “Reef,” age
39, of South Euclid, Ohio.
Errick Phillips, aka “E” or “Ike,” age
41, of Lyndhurst, Ohio;
William Mangum, Jr., aka “Billy” or “Steel
Bill,” age 43, of Cleveland;
Nora Flores, age 41, of Laredo, Texas;
Virginia Perez, age 35, of Laredo, Texas;
Rachele Lynn Munoz, age 32, of Laredo, Texas;
Richard A. Born, age 58, of Cleveland, Ohio;
Lamark Robinson, aka “Squirrel,” or “S.Q.,” age
30, of Cleveland;
Mark Anderson, aka “Floyd,” age 38, of
Cleveland Heights, Ohio;
Robert Oldorff, age 52, of Cleveland;
John H. McDonald, age 52, of Cleveland;
Sharon Manchook, age 51, of Cleveland.
“This
group is accused of using private airplanes
to bring piles of cocaine into Cleveland,” said
Steven M. Dettelbach, United States Attorney
for the Northern District of Ohio. “This
case is a great example of law enforcement
working together to choke off the supply
of drugs that hit our streets.”
DEA
Special Agent in Charge Robert Corso said: “The
investigation has successfully taken down
a major cocaine trafficking organization
operating in Northern Ohio. These indictments
illustrate that no matter how creative drug
traffickers attempt to be in order to avoid
detection, when there is cooperation and
communication among law enforcement agencies,
conspiracies such as this will eventually
be identified and eliminated.”
“This
investigation is a sterling example of how
federal, state and local law enforcement
were able to successfully dismantle a major
narcotics smuggling organization in the Cleveland
area," said Brian M. Moskowitz, special
agent in charge of ICE HSI for Michigan and
Ohio. "HSI will continue to utilize
its broad authorities to aggressively target
and takedown group who are dispensing poison
into our communities."
In
addition to the conspiracy charge, defendants
William Mangum, Jr., Virginia Perez, Rachele
Lynn Munoz, Nora Flores, Errick Phillips,
and Johnny S. Phillips are also charged with
interstate travel in aid of a racketeering
enterprise for trips they took between Ohio
and other states such as Texas, Illinois,
and Georgia as part of the drug trafficking
enterprise. Johnny S. Phillips, Richard A.
Born, and Sharon Manchook are also charged
with distributing cocaine on two occasions,
while Errick Phillips and Mark Anderson are
charged with possession with intent to distribute
amounts of cocaine on two other occasions.
The
indictment describes a conspiracy in which
large amounts of cocaine were flown in multiple
trips to Cleveland from Laredo, Texas using
private chartered airplanes. The cocaine
was delivered to Johnny S. Phillips and Errick
Phillips. The proceeds from the cocaine were
then flown back to the suppliers in Laredo,
Texas, according to the indictment.
Approximately
13 kilograms of cocaine were seized in February
2010 at the airport in Laredo, Texas, that
was scheduled to be delivered to Cleveland.
Cocaine was also obtained from suppliers
in Illinois. In August 2010, approximately
seven kilograms of cocaine that were supposed
to be delivered from Illinois to Cleveland
were seized in Michigan from two couriers.
In January 2011, approximately four kilograms
of cocaine were seized from Errick Phillips
as he was traveling back from Illinois to
Cleveland. Investigators also seized over
$157,500 in drug proceeds from a courier
in December 2010, who was believed to be
traveling from Cleveland to Texas, according
to the indictment.
The
cocaine obtained from these multiple locations
was then distributed through a network of
dealers in the Cleveland, Ohio, area to lower-level
dealers and users, according to the indictment.
The
case is being prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorneys Matthew W. Shepherd and
Duncan Brown. The case was investigated through
the combined efforts of the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), Homeland Security Investigations
(HSI), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
United States Marshal’s Service (USMS),
Ohio Highway Patrol, Erie County Prosecutor’s
Office, Cuyahoga County Sheriff’s Office,
Lake County Narcotics Agency, Cleveland Police
Department, Cleveland Heights Police Department,
Euclid Police Department, Lyndhurst Police
Department, North Royalton Police Department,
South Euclid Police Department, and Westlake
Police Department.
If
convicted, the defendants’ sentences
will be determined by the court after review
of factors unique to this case, including
the defendants’ prior criminal records,
if any, the defendants’ roles in the
offenses and the characteristics of the violations.
In all cases, the sentences will not exceed
the statutory maximum and in most cases they
will be less than the maximum.
An
indictment is only a charge and is not evidence
of guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair
trial in which it will be the government’s
burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.
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