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Release
December 13, 2004
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
PIO Laura DiCesare
(202) 305-8093
Federal
Grand Jury Returns Superceding Indictment Against Members of Major
Drug Organization
SAC Laura M.
Nagel of DEA’s Washington Division announced
a further step in a joint law enforcement operation targeting the narcotics
trade and related violence in Northeast Washington, D.C. Today, 21 defendants
were arraigned by United States District Judge Rosemary M. Collyer on
a superceding indictment returned by the grand jury on December 3, 2004.
The defendants, largely centered in northeast Washington, have been charged
with federal racketeering, narcotics and firearms charges, and on murder,
attempted murder, attempted killing of a police officer, and armed robbery.
In
a related case, Judge Collyer also arraigned five additional defendants
on a superceding indictment charging them with distributing phencyclidine,
also
known as PCP, in Northeast Washington. If convicted of the charges, all of
the defendants face a maximum sentence of life without the possibility
of parole.
Additionally, six of the defendants potentially face the death penalty as a
result of having been charged with death-penalty eligible offenses.
The
superceding indictments in this case are the latest step in an operation
that resulted in the previous indictments of individuals who were responsible
for trafficking PCP in Washington, D.C. Today’s indictments broaden the
scope of charges of the local defendants to include six murders, as well as other
federal racketeering charges, including violent and narcotics crimes. The operation
grew out of a long term investigation which was conducted by the Safe Streets
Task Force, a joint DEA/FBI/MPD task force targeting gang activity in the District
of Columbia.
According
to the two related federal indictments, the defendants operated as
a narcotics distribution organization. The entire conspiracy was largely
directed
by Robert P. Bascom and Abdul Smith, both 31, and based in the New York
area.
Bascom and Smith primarily arranged for the shipment of PCP from other
areas for later distribution to the District of Columbia. A local Maryland
man
acted as their primary intermediary with the group operating at 18th and
M Streets,
Northeast. While the conspiracy was national in scope, the local component
was centered at 18th and M, Northeast. The local organization was led by
John L.
Franklin, 31, of the 1300 block of Belmont Street, N.W., who is alleged
to have obtained PCP from the local Maryland man, and who was the major
distributor
of
PCP to the 18th and M Street drug traffickers.
The
mass arrests of this organization and the superceding indictments are
a culmination of an investigation that has seized multi-gallon quantities
of
PCP from the members – PCP
that has been valued at nearly $1 million or narcotics destined for the streets
of Washington, D.C. The operation entailed the joint efforts of approximately
300 law enforcement officers from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the Metropolitan Police Department, and Maryland, Virginia,
New York, and Georgia law enforcement authorities.
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