| News
Release
June 8, 2004
Contact: Laura DiCesare PIO—202.305.8093
31
Indicted For Operating A Drug Trafficking
and Money Laundering Enterprise
JUN 18 -- Laura
M. Nagel, Special Agent in Charge of DEA’s Washington Division
announced today that a federal grand jury indicted Paulette Martin,
age 57, of Takoma Park, Maryland, and 30 others for crimes arising
from their three and a half year operation of a large drug trafficking
and money laundering enterprise in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan
area.
The second superceding
indictment charges that from at least January 2001 through May 31,
2004, the defendants distributed multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine,
crack cocaine, and heroin throughout the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan
area
and had become a major drug source in this area. The defendants received their
narcotics from organizations in New York, Los Angeles, and the Caribbean. Some
members of the organization utilized their drug proceeds to fraudulently purchase
life insurance policies on individuals without those individuals’ knowledge,
and collected on these policies when the individuals died. From about June
13, 1995 until March 2004, one of the leaders of this organization, Paulette
Martin,
worked in conjunction with Richard Gunn, an insurance agent doing business
in Burtonsville, Maryland, to acquire over 17 life insurance policies that
were
opened on numerous individuals, many of whom also have criminal backgrounds.
As recently as March 2004, Martin and her co-conspirators collected the insurance
proceeds as a result of the fraudulent scheme.
This investigation,
known as Operation Encore, was initiated in October 2002 by investigators
of the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement office in Maryland. This investigation involved a multi-agency
drug-money laundering task force including the Prince George’s County Police, Montgomery
Police, Maryland State Police, Baltimore City Police, Howard County Police, and
Baltimore County Police departments. The Insurance-Fraud Division of the Maryland
Office of the Attorney General assisted with the insurance fraud investigation.
Beginning June
1, 2004, this multi-agency task force executed 30 federal search warrants
throughout Maryland, Washington D.C., and New York, resulting
in the
arrest of 29 individuals on federal drug conspiracy and mail-wire fraud
charges. During this enforcement action, agents seized 8 handguns,
a ballistic vest,
large quantities of cocaine and heroin, and over one million dollars in
criminal proceeds
that this organization had accumulated through their operation.
Several weeks earlier,
the multi-agency task force arrested Gwendolyn Levi, age 60, of Elkridge,
Maryland, Donna Johnson, age 46, of Landover, Maryland,
and
Juan Manuel Rojas-Castro, age 29, of Bronx, New York. These individuals
were found in possession of over 3 kilograms of heroin, a quarter million
dollars
in cash, and, as part of this organization, have been determined to be
responsible for importing large quantities of heroin into Maryland from
the New York
area.
Twenty-nine defendants
have been taken into custody. The remaining 2 defendants are fugitives
and are currently being sought.
The maximum penalty
for the drug conspiracy count is life imprisonment, and 20 years for
the mail and wire fraud related charges.
An indictment is
not a finding of guilt. An individual charges by indictment is presumed
innocent unless and until proven guilty at
some later criminal
proceedings.
The case is being
prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Deborah A. Johnston and Bonnie
S. Greenberg.
|