| News
Release
September 26, 2005
Contact: PIO Laura DiCesare
(202) 305-8093
Members
of Large Drug Organization Sentenced for Gun, Drug, and Money
Laundering Charges
Special Agent in
Charge of DEA’s Washington Division, Shawn A. Johnson, announced
the sentencing of the following defendants in connection with their
conviction by a federal grand jury on June 23, 2005:
Deone Antonio Melvin,
age 26, of Lanham, Maryland, 540 months in prison followed by five
years of supervised release for conspiracy to distribute powder and
crack
cocaine, distribution of cocaine, conspiracy to engage in money laundering,
money laundering, possession of guns in furtherance of drug trafficking
and possession
of guns after being convicted of a felony;
Ramone Stephon
Jones, age 27, of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 360 months in prison followed
by ten years of supervised release for conspiracy to distribute powder
and crack cocaine, conspiracy to engage in money laundering, money laundering,
possession of guns in furtherance of drug trafficking and possession of guns
after being convicted of a felony;
Stephon Mason,
age 31, of Fort Washington, Maryland, life imprisonment plus five years,
followed by ten years of supervised release for conspiracy to distribute
powder and crack cocaine, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, conspiracy
to engage in money laundering, money laundering, possession of guns in furtherance
of drug trafficking and possession of guns after being convicted of a felony;
and,
Adrian Alexander,
age 28, of Suitland, Maryland, 295 months in prison followed by five
years of supervised release for conspiracy to distribute powder and
crack
cocaine and possession of guns after being convicted of a felony.
The court also
ordered that Melvin, Jones, and Mason forfeit $5 million to the government
and that Alexander forfeit $300,000 to the government. The court also
ordered that the defendants forfeit to the government various vehicles which
were used to facilitate drug trafficking or which were purchased using drug
proceeds.
According to evidence
presented at trial, including calls intercepted as a result of several
wiretaps initiated by the investigators, from 1997 through 2003, the
defendants used numerous vehicles equipped with sophisticated hidden compartments
to transport hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from New York to the Maryland-D.C.
area, which they then redistributed to customers locally. The defendants used
a drug supplier in New York to obtain the cocaine as well as vehicles equipped
with hidden compartments. The sophisticated hidden compartments, which were
installed
in the vehicles in New York, were operated through complicated hydraulic systems
which were designed to allow the defendants to evade detection by law enforcement.
During the investigation, law enforcement officers seized several of the vehicles
and were able to dismantle the hidden compartments, many of which contained
drugs and guns.
According to evidence
presented at trial, the defendants also laundered their drug proceeds
by purchasing expensive cars and titling various vehicles in the
names of others. The evidence showed that the defendants titled vehicles in
other individuals’ names in order to conceal the fact that the vehicles were
being used to facilitate their drug trafficking. Over the last two years, several
other defendants have pleaded guilty to drug, money laundering and/or gun charges.
Charges remain pending against Jermaine Wilson who is awaiting trial.
This Organized
Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force investigation was conducted by the
Drug Enforcement Administration’s Washington Division and the Prince
George’s County Police Department. The case was prosecuted by Assistant
United States Attorneys Mythili Raman and Jason M. Weinstein. |