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Drug lord shapes up
#709022
04/07/13 03:01 PM
04/07/13 03:01 PM
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,571
Scorsese
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OP
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,571
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Drug lord shapes up Now sweatin’ the oldies By GARY BUISO Last Updated: 10:55 AM, April 7, 2013 Posted: 11:56 PM, April 6, 2013 A drug kingpin who controlled a multimillion-dollar cocaine empire in Queens that was so lucrative his lifestyle became the stuff of rap lyrics and street legend, is now in the midst of a senior moment. After a 20-year stint in federal prisons, Thomas Mickens, once known as “Tony Montana” — after Al Pacino’s notorious “Scarface” character — is teaching fitness classes to senior citizens. “People who used to work for me look at what I’m doing now and say, ‘What are you doing?’” he told The Post in his first-ever interview. “I left the past in the past — and I was able to walk away.” Inside the Rain Senior Center in The Bronx last week, no one knew anything about Montana — only Tommy. “Both arms up! Here we go!” Mickens yelled over a thumping bass. A room full of seniors sat enthralled by every squeal and sound effect out of his mouth. “Three, Four, Five, Six. Talk to me! “Are you weak? No! We’re not weak! Owwwwwwww!” Mickens, 49, started out life in Corona, the son of Mary Mickens and Thomas “Weasel” Harris — a big-time numbers runner. Mary remarried, and moved the family to working-class Laurelton, where Mickens began showing his entrepreneurial spirit. When he was 10 he carried groceries at area markets, but realized he could make more cash with a cartel of his own. “I’d pay my friends five dollars a day to help me work, and I’d collect all their money.” But it wasn’t enough. His friends who dealt drugs dressed better than him, and had new sneakers instead of his hand-me-down Pro Keds. So he dropped out of school by the time he was about 15 to sell marijuana in Mentone Park off the Belt Parkway. “I started with three dollars. I bought a trey bag, rolled up eight joints, and sold each one for a dollar.” By 17, he was dealing cocaine and living on the 30th floor of a doorman building on Queens Boulevard. “I was selling a kilo every two days,” he recalled. And he now had a crew of at least 50 to help him move the product. The money — $100,000 on good weeks — really started to pour in. And so did the toys. He eventually amassed a fleet of 21 luxury cars, including a Rolls Royce equipped with a TV, a Ferrari and a Lamborghini; a $800,000 mansion in Dix Hills; a 38-foot-yacht paid for in cash; a helicopter, and a million-dollar smile showing off the diamonds and emeralds bonded to his teeth. His lifestyle was immortalized by the rapper 50 Cent in the song, “Ghetto Qu’ran” : “Lord knows, Tommy had Laurelton sold/ Helicopters, Rolls Royces with Louis Vuitton interior/ Might sound like I’m fantasizing, but son I’m dead serious.” Mickens soon owned a string of businesses along Merrick and Rockaway boulevards and Hollis Avenue, all with the “Montana” brand — Montana Dry Cleaners, Montana Sporting Goods, Montana Grocery. He said he stopped hustling in 1986, but the feds nabbed him in 1988, and in 1989 he was convicted of drug dealing, money laundering and tax evasion. He was fined $1 million, had $2.5 million in assets seized, and was handed a 35-year sentence. After getting out of prison in 2008, he created his first non-Montana business — the “Tommy Experience” dubbed as “a premier health, exercise, and wellness” program. Each session, he said, “is like me giving back to my mother,” who died in 1993 after a stroke. Seniors who experience Tommy second that emotion. “He’s our pride and joy,” said Daphne Avery, 73, who was untroubled by the news that Tommy was once a coke kingpin. “We love him regardless of what he’s done — his past is his past. This is the present.” One senior was not only unsurprised — he was empathetic. “I did time myself — 30 years, ” said James Alexander, 81, a volunteer at the center who said he too was locked up for drug dealing. “This shows he got something out of jail. He learned something from it — how to help people.” A Department for the Aging spokesperson had no comment about Mickens’ past, only saying that city-contracted centers make their own hiring decisions according to their own policies. Sitting comfortably on his couch in his warmly decorated Far Rockaway condo, Mickens — now a father of a 4-year-old girl — insisted he’s humbled. “I’m not proud of what I did to my neighborhoods. I’m not proud of the pain I put my mother through,” he said. Mickens said he was left penniless after he got out of jail, because people he trusted mismanaged his money. Today, he earns about $40-$150 per class, but still manages to live large, cruising from center to center in a black 2012 Jaguar XJL — a lease. Some days, he’ll drive through Laurelton, where he was once “the man.” “I don’t stop,” he said. http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/drug_lord_shapes_up_OMDbmEjQOOMvlgRZRz8U5O
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Re: Drug lord shapes up
[Re: franklinmint]
#709166
04/08/13 11:45 AM
04/08/13 11:45 AM
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,571
Scorsese
OP
Underboss
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OP
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 3,571
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found this article about him after he was arrested.
Tommy Mickens/Tony Montana(Legendary Drug King-Pin from Queens,New York)
By the time he was 24 years old, Thomas Mickens, a high school dropout turned cocaine dealer, had amassed a fortune.
He owned a fleet of luxury cars, including a Rolls-Royce, and 20 pieces of real estate, including a $760,775 home in Dix Hills, L.I., a condominium in Diamond Bar, Calif., a sporting goods shop, a grocery store and a laundry. He relaxed on his 38-foot yacht berthed in California. He even had diamonds, a sapphire and an emerald implanted in his teeth.
But for Mr. Mickens, a 26-year-old who was sentenced last month to 35 years in Federal prison on drug, tax-evasion and money-laundering charges, there was more to some of the lavish spending than just a mindless pursuit of expensive trinkets. Law enforcement authorities say his case demonstrates the methods used by middle-level narcotics traffickers to launder the huge profits they earn from selling illegal drugs.
Unlike major international traffickers, who have recourse to off-shore corporations, Swiss bank accounts, and other sophisticated schemes, these dealers, sometimes with little education and few contacts outside their neighborhood, find ways - often with the connivance of legitimate businesses - to hide their assets.
''He probably did the best job of all dealers out here of getting his money into legitimate businesses,'' said Sgt. Michael McGuiness of the Queens Narcotics Division. ''Tommy's a smart kid.''
Mr. Mickens made most of his purchases in cash - sometimes carried in plastic shopping bags - and despite Federal laws that require the reporting of cash transactions involving more than $10,000, he had no trouble finding lawyers, merchants and real estate agents who would look the other way.
As head of a 50-person organization that controlled the flow of drugs in the Laurelton and Springfield Gardens neighborhoods near Kennedy Airport, Mr. Mickens was one of hundreds - no one knows the precise number - of dealers who in the decentralized world of the drug trade constitute its middle management, investigators say.
Often these are unschooled youths who, in their late teens or early 20's, displayed enough guts and guile to move up from the street corners where they sold crack to where the real money could be made: heading gangs distributing drugs in fairly well-defined territories.
''For every neighborhood in New York, there is someone like Tommy Mickens,'' said Special Agent Jim Triano, who heads the forfeiture and assets seizure team in the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. ''The police generally know who they are.''
Kirby Heller, the assistant United States Attorney who prosecuted Mr. Mickens, said in an interview: ''The downfall of Tommy Mickens was that he was too extravagant in his life style. If he wasn't riding around in a Rolls and buying a fancy car every few months we still might have gotten him, but it would have been more difficult.''
He called himself Tony Montana, after the drug-trafficking protagonist played by Al Pacino in the 1983 film ''Scarface.'' And at his apex Mr. Mickens was, along with dealers like Lorenzo ''Fat Cat'' Nichols, Howard ''Pappy'' Mason, and Kenneth McGriff, one of the drug kingpins of Queens.
''He ran Merrick Road,'' said a detective who spoke on condition that he not be identified. ''On almost every corner you had about five guys who did crack, and it was all his organization.''
After his arrest in May, 1988, law-enforcement officials were able to trace and seize about $2.5 million in assets. But they said that that was only a fraction of what Mr. Mickens made selling cocaine and crack for four years.
An Internal Revenue Service investigator who spoke on condition that he not be identified estimated that another $1 million in assets, including five cars, had not been seized. ''We found a huge safe deposit box at a bank near his residence in Diamond Bar,'' he said. ''Inside were two large empty shoe boxes. You don't keep shoes in a safe deposit box.''
Claimed He Inherited A Trunk of Money
Mr. Mickens may have come by his free-spending ways naturally. He is the youngest child of Thomas Harris, a dapper numbers operator in Queens. How big a numbers operator Thomas Harris was an issue at Mr. Mickens's Federal trial. His attorney, Robert Simels, contended that Mr. Harris was a major figure in the policy racket and that when he died in 1974 he left his son a trunk full of money. This money, Mr. Simels said, bought the cars, houses, stores and yacht. The police dispute that.
By the time he was 19 years old, Mr. Mickens was peddling cocaine in fair-sized quantities. In October 1982 he sold half an ounce to an undercover detective, and eventually served a one-to-three year sentence.
Robert Russell, the detective who made that buy, recalled a clean-cut, personable, almost charming young man, unlike many dealers he has encountered. ''He didn't really smell of the streets,'' said Mr. Russell, now a detective with the Manhattan District Attorney's office. ''He hadn't picked up that evil, wary look.''
Even before his parole in June, 1984, Thomas Mickens began the spending spree that was to characterize his next four years, according to testimony at his Federal trial. In May 1984, while on a work-release program, he paid $28,146 in cash for a 1985 Cadillac Fleetwood. Two months later he bought a 1984 BMW, again for cash.
During the next four years he was to buy at least 18 more cars, including Jeeps, BMW's, Porsches, Saabs, two Mercedes-Benzes, a Ferrari, a Jaguar and a Rolls-Royce, sometimes trading in old models. He also bought a Bayliner Yacht for $141,467 and 20 pieces of property for which he paid more than $1.6 million, according to evidence admitted at the trial.
Turning Big Deals Into Little Smurfs
To hide the true ownership of his property, and to protect himself from liability, Mr. Mickens often set up corporations and listed property in their names, law-enforcement officials said. Sometimes with the help of a lawyer, he bought houses to convert his tainted funds into clean money, Ms. Heller said.
In February 1987, when Mr. Mickens bought a piece of property at 159-21 Grand Central Parkway in Queens for $184,766, the seller accepted $69,000 of the payment in cash and agreed to list the official sale price on the closing documents at around $116,000. The transaction, though not illegal, allowed Mr. Mickens to turn the cash into equity on the home. Even if he were to sell the house for exactly what he paid, he would recoup the $69,000 and have a ready explanation to the authorities on how he received it. ''It would be clean money,'' said the I.R.S. agent.
After Jan. 1, 1985, when the I.R.S. began to require reporting of cash transactions over $10,000, Mr. Mickens often used a tactic called ''Smurfing.'' The practice, breaking up a large cash transaction into smaller ones, takes its name from the elfin television cartoon characters, the Smurfs. Usually, payments are made using cashier's checks or money orders for less than $10,000.
For example, Mr. Mickens used 12 checks and money orders to pay the bulk of the cost of the $100,655 Rolls- Royce he bought in November 1986, financial records showed. He used 69 money orders to make payments totalling $51,700 for property on Hollis Avenue in Queens, and 159 money orders and bank checks for $90,000 in payments for property on Grand Central Parkway.
Cars in the Names Of Unwitting Relatives
Though the authorities had their eyes on Mr. Mickens, it was his love of fancy cars that gave them their break.
On Feb. 6, 1987, a New Jersey state trooper pulled over a Mercedes-Benz 560 SEL going 80 miles an hour in a 50 m.p.h. zone. At the wheel of the car was Anthony Jacobs, who the police said was Mr. Mickens's chief lieutenant. In the passenger seat was Mr. Mickens, though his drivers license identified him as Thomas Harris.
On the back seat was a bag containing $15,175 in small bills, on which drug-sniffing dogs found traces of cocaine. Mr. Mickens told the police that the car belonged to his aunt, Azzierene Young, and that they had bought it two days earlier from Martin Motorcar in Atlantic City. He said he put down a $500 cash deposit and was returning with his aunt's money to pay the balance.
The police later confirmed that a deposit had been placed on the Mercedes, and that it was registered to Ms. Young at 2228 Murray Avenue in Atlantic City. Investigating further, however, the police discovered three other cars - two more Mercedes and a Saab 9000T -that were bought at Martin Motorcar between March 1986 and January 1987 and registered at the same address. When the police interviewed Ms. Young, who turned out to be the mother of one of Mr. Mickens's associates, she denied knowing Mr. Mickens. She said she did not live in Atlantic City and had never been to Martin Motorcar.
What the police had stumbled on was Mr. Mickens's practice of purchasing luxury cars and registering under false names or in the names of friends or relatives. Checking motor vehicle registration lists, the police discovered other cars allegedly belonging to Mr. Mickens's mother, his sister and the father of his long-time girlfriend. Agents then tracked down the salesmen, who generally remembered the sales and said that Mr. Mickens had bought the cars. The cars indicated to investigators that Mr. Mickens's income was far beyond the $28,000 he said he made as an upholsterer
Mr. Mickens tended to use checks or cash, often in small denominations. A dealer who sold him a Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet testified that Mr. Mickens brought in $35,250 in a plastic shopping bag. ''You know - what they give out in grocery stores,'' he said. Another testified that his own thumbs turned black from counting bills.
Yet according to the authorities, no car dealer called the police. ''Nobody,'' said Ms. Heller. ''Not a one.'' One, Glenn Shafer of Martin Motorcar, was prosecuted, investigators said, because he was particularly active in helping Mr. Mickens evade the reporting law.
''I asked every car dealer: 'What did you think? You had to know the money was dirty,' '' said the I.R.S. agent. ''To a man, they all said the same thing: 'I'm not a cop. My business is to sell cars.' ''
Drug investigators say the failure of merchants to report suspicious cash transactions hampers their fight against drug traffickers, though some officers take a fatalistic view.
''It takes a great deal of moral courage to say: 'I can't accept money because I'm suspicious of where it comes from,' '' Mr. Triano said. ''It just doesn't happen.''
To curb Smurfing, Congress in 1988 authorized the Treasury Department to require some banks and other financial institutions to report all cash transactions involving more than $3,000.
Mr. Mickens was convicted in June after a four-month trial in Federal District Court in Brooklyn. Under new Federal sentencing guidelines, he will have to spend at least 30 years in prison. He was also fined $1 million.
Still, in Laurelton, where the police say a group of Jamaicans is already vying to replace Mr. Mickens's operation, there appears to be nearly as much grudging admiration for his success as there is criticism for his line of work.
''He was 23, 24 years old, and he had it made,'' said Lindell Poole, 31, a custodian. ''He should have taken the money and walked away.''
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