| News
Release
September 13, 2005
Contact: PIO Laura DiCesare
(202) 305-8093
Six
Members of a Severn Street Drug Operation and a Supplier Indicted
on Cocaine Trafficking and Firearms Charges
“Pioneer City Boys” Allegedly Shot a Police
Officer and Threatened Cooperators
Shawn A. Johnson,
Special Agent in Charge of DEA’s Washington Division, announced
that a federal indictment was unsealed against seven men for conspiracy
to distribute crack cocaine. The charges include allegations of crack
cocaine distribution, firearms offenses, and the shooting of Anne Arundel
County Police Officer William Hicks. The indictment was returned under
seal by a federal grand jury on September 7, 2005.
The indictment,
which was unsealed, alleges that from 2002 until the present, conspirators
used residences on Arwell Court, Pioneer Drive, and other locations
to package and store cocaine and cocaine base (crack) for street sales in a
community
known as “Pioneer City” in Severn, Maryland. Six of the defendants are alleged to be members of the Pioneer City
Boys: Lowell Joseph Braswell, age 21, of LaPlata; Tony Maurice Horne,
Jr. age 24, of Glen Burnie; Laronte Lee Richardson, age 19, of Baltimore;
Calvin Ignatius Savoy, age 27, of Severn; Troemaine Herbert Storey, age
27, of Glen Burnie; and Paul Eugene Turner, Jr, age 30, of Severn. A
seventh man, Jerome Otto Waters, Jr., age 27, of Annapolis, is alleged
to be one several sources of crack cocaine for the conspirators.
The indictment charges
that drug dealing operations took place in Severn, Maryland, in communities
known as Still Meadows, Meade Village, and Pioneer
City. Members “tagged” or marked the walls, streets, and
mailboxes of the communities to warn people not to cooperate with law
enforcement. Members used violence against competing drug traffickers
in open view of the community to deter citizens from cooperating with
police or the sale of drugs. The specific acts of violence charged in
the indictment include the sale of firearms to undercover Anne Arundel
County police officers, and the September 11, 2004 shooting of an Anne
Arundel County police officer in the 1600 block of Annapolis Road in
Odenton. Officer Hicks was shot once in the arm and has since returned
to full duty.
Each of the seven defendants
is charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine, which carries a maximum
term of life imprisonment. Braswell
and Richardson are also charged with possession of a firearm by a
felon and face a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison consecutive to
the
drug conspiracy prison term. Savoy faces a maximum sentence of life
in prison consecutive to the drug conspiracy prison term for discharging
a firearm in connection with the shooting of the Anne Arundel County
police officer.
The investigation was
the result of the cooperative federal task force which, along with DEA’s Baltimore District Office, includes the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives; the Anne Arundel
County Police Department; the Baltimore City Police Department; and the
Annapolis Police Department. Assistant United States Attorney Andrea
L. Smith and Anne Arundel County Assistant State’s Attorney M.
Virginia Miles are prosecuting the case. |