News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 7, 2006
Contact: William Hocker
(215) 861-3436
Federal,
State, and Local Law Enforcement Agencies Take Down Major Allentown
Drug Organization
First Case Under “222 Corridor” Anti-Gang
Initiative
DEC 7 --
(PHILADELPHIA) – Special Agent-in-Charge James M. Kasson announced
today that federal, state, and local enforcement agencies have shut
down “Mafia-El Don,” believed to be the Lehigh Valley’s
largest cocaine trafficking organization. Nine alleged members of the
gang have been arrested and charged this week. The takedown follows
an eighteen-month investigation by DEA and FBI and was supported by
the Allentown Police Department, ATF, the Bethlehem Police Department
the DA's Offices of Lehigh and Northampton Counties, the Easton Police
Department, the Northampton County Drug Task Force, the Palmer Township
Police Department, the Pennsylvania State Police, the Reading Police
Department, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Whitehall Police Department.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney John
Gallagher.
This is the first
gang case prosecuted in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania as part
of the “222 Corridor” anti-gang initiative, a federally
funded program designed to defeat some of the most violent and pervasive
gangs in the country. The “222 Corridor” – which
includes the cities of Allentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Reading, Lancaster,
Harrisburg, and York – was one of six target areas chosen to
receive funding. Those charged were members of a violent organization
that was responsible for a major portion of the cocaine trafficking
in the Lehigh Valley.” The “Mafia-El Don” organization
has distributed at least 50 kilograms of cocaine in the Lehigh Valley
area since the summer of 2006. In Tuesday’s round-up, seven people
were arrested for direct roles in the conspiracy, two others were arrested
for buying kilogram-quantities of cocaine from the organization with
the intent of reselling that cocaine.
“Cocaine has
wreaked havoc against the citizens of the Lehigh Valley far too long,” said
DEA Special Agent-in-Charge James Kasson. “The arrests of the
members of this drug trafficking organization have brought their devastating
impact against our communities to an end. The joint law enforcement
efforts demonstrated throughout this investigation have clearly disrupted
and dismantled this organization.”
The investigation
included a five-month wiretap in which hundreds of calls were intercepted
involving the procurement and selling of cocaine in quantities from
14 grams up to kilograms. The cocaine was sold primarily from a bodega
in Allentown and a restaurant in Easton. During the execution of search
warrants in Lehigh and Northampton Counties, the agents recovered cocaine,
three firearms, and an estimated $1 million in cash. More than a kilo
of cocaine was recovered during the course of the investigation.
During the investigation,
agents twice thwarted plans for the commission of violent crimes. On
one occasion, the agents intercepted calls between the conspirators
arranging for an AK-47 assault rifle to be brought to the Easton restaurant
to settle a dispute. To disrupt the plot, the agents and other officers
then visited the restaurant under the guise of making community routine
notifications to residents and businesses in the area. On another occasion,
the agents intercepted calls between the conspirators in which they
planned for and hired another individual to commit a home invasion
robbery. To thwart that attack, the agents and other officers staked
out the home of the hired gun and intercepted him in route to his intended
victim while in possession of a stolen handgun, brass knuckles, and
cocaine.
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