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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 29, 2007
17 Additional People Indicted In Large Scale Drug
And Money Laundering Case
MAR 29 -- Seventeen individuals have been charged in a indictment with violating various federal
drug laws which include conspiracy to distribute cocaine and money laundering, announced
United States Attorney Stephen J. Murphy. Mr. Murphy was joined in the announcement by
Special Agent in Charge Robert L. Corso, Drug Enforcement Administration, Special Agent in
Charge Maurice Aouate, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, U.S. Marshal Robert
Grubbs, United States Marshals Service, and Peter Munoz, Director of the Michigan State
Police.
The newly indicted were Derrick Armstrong, 35, Elijah Amir Baker, 24, William Boddie,
42, Martez Deon Byrth, 34, Monica Lane Cook, 26, Monique Lane Cook, 26, Jean Paul
Grammatico, 34, Anthony Troy Gray, 33, Charles Edward Howard, Jr., 26, Dexter Joseph
Hussey, 41, Danny Jones, 35, Joseph M. Jones, III, 57, Ricardo Denard McFarlin, 26,
Terrance Lee Short, 34, Robert M. Sills, Jr., 33, Rashawn Simmons, 26 and Pierino Verrelli,
53.
The indictment, which was returned on December 15, 2006 and unsealed today, is
related to a previous indictment returned last year that alleges that Terry Flenory, Demetrius
Flenory and thirty-six others operated a drug organization, at some point named the "Black
Mafia Family" (BMF), which dealt in multi-kilo quantities of cocaine in the Detroit metropolitan
area beginning in the early 1990's. By the mid 1990's, the organization extended into other
parts of the country including Kentucky, Georgia, Missouri, California, and Texas. As part of
the conspiracy, BMF would use vehicles equipped with traps and hidden compartments to
conceal and transport the cash generated from the sale of cocaine. The return of this
indictment increases the total number of indicted BMF members and or individuals associated
with the organization to fifty-eight defendants.
Since 2000, law enforcement has seized approximately 500 kilograms of cocaine
and approximately nineteen million dollars in assets, including bank accounts, cash,
real property, jewelry and vehicles. The members of this organization, using the illegal
proceeds of their narcotic sales, purchased and leased numerous luxury vehicles,
acquired and sold real property and purchased jewelry while concealing the true source
and nature of the funds involved in the transaction through false names and nominee
purchasers.
It is alleged that members of the organization would deposit large amounts of
cash derived from the sale of cocaine into various bank accounts; purchase cashier’s
checks and money orders; and wire transfer these funds. These funds would then be
used to purchase assets and pay personal expenses with the goal of concealing the
true source, nature and ownership of the funds which had been derived from the
organization’s cocaine sales.
Members of the organization would also purchase winning four digit State of
Michigan lottery tickets with drug proceeds from an individual who obtained them from
the true winners in cash. These winning tickets, valued at over $1 million, would be
redeemed with the State of Michigan's lottery bureau and used to purchase homes,
make mortgage payments, and purchase vehicles, hiding the fact that the true source
of the money were derived from the drug organization’s cocaine sales.
An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. Every defendant is
entitled to a fair trial in which it will be the government's burden to prove guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. |