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detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin #843036
05/21/15 03:09 PM
05/21/15 03:09 PM
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Scorsese Offline OP
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Interesting story about a 15 year fugitive drug trafficker 15 years and has continued to organise multi million dollar drug deals whilst on the run.

Detroit -- A federal grand jury is weighing charges in a case involving a fugitive and a $200,000 Rolls-Royce Phantom that's been leased, stolen, hidden and hunted by federal agents along a digital breadcrumb trail.

Interviews, data from a secret spy gadget and thousands of pages of court records offer insight into a celebrity-studded, true-crime caper starring a dream car, rapper Snoop Dogg and one slippery fugitive.

The fugitive disappeared 15 years ago and is wanted in three states for allegedly importing cocaine across the country, including Metro Detroit. The fugitive has outsmarted agents from the FBI, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Postal Inspection Service thanks to sneaky tactics, near misses and fake names.


READ THE REST HERE. http://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/sp...probe/27668423/

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: Scorsese] #843064
05/21/15 06:59 PM
05/21/15 06:59 PM
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getthesenets Offline
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good post

weird story.....just glanced over the full story in the link...

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: getthesenets] #843167
05/22/15 03:31 PM
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Another story linked to jimmy the henchman rosemond and the music industry.

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: Scorsese] #843173
05/22/15 04:05 PM
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mightyhealthy Offline
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Great story. Very interesting. Can't believe this guy has been able to evade capture for 15 years, while dealing kilos.

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: mightyhealthy] #843261
05/23/15 11:58 AM
05/23/15 11:58 AM
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This guys the real life keyzer soze.

the other guy mentioned in the article marc ladler was brought up during the henchman case by one of the cooperating witnesses.

Quote:
Here’s what Winston Harris had to say about “310 Motoring” company’s owner, Marc Laidler — and how Laidler laundered drug money through rapper Game, by granting the lyricist his own “Hurricane” sneaker line, back in 2005:

“Jimmy “Henchman” Rosemond was having cocaine shipped from California to New York utilizing a Nissan Sentra that was being shipped on a tractor trailer. The shipment was stolen and Rosemond believed Marc Laidler was responsible for stealing the cocaine shipment. It was Laidler’s idea of utilizing vehicles to send drugs across the country. Laidler had a shoe deal with the artist Jayceon ‘Game’ Taylor.”

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: Scorsese] #868142
11/28/15 09:48 AM
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captured the guy. His cousin is now in charge.

Detroit's Most Wanted: Dwayne Richards, using the rap game to cover a nationwide drug ring
Ann Marie LaFlamme
4:59 PM, Nov 21, 2015
11:53 AM, Nov 22, 2015

Autoplay:

WXYZSHOW CAPTION


DETROIT (WXYZ) - A high level drug dealer, a wanted fugitive police say is connected to decades of illegal activity.

The U.S. Marshals say Dwayne Richards is the final piece of a group they’ve been hunting for years.

His cousin, the kingpin, was just locked up in California, leaving Richards in charge of the Detroit-based nationwide drug ring.

“These guys are definitely flashy, they’re into high end cars, they like to flaunt their money,” Deputy U.S. Marshal Aaron Garcia said. “Basically to mock law enforcement like, ‘hey look at what I got.’”

Money, cars, drugs and guns are all tied to a drug ring Garcia says begins right here on our streets.

“This ain’t your typical drug dealer on the street level. This guy is believed to be a leader of an organization running the Detroit area,” he said.

Richards is at the top of the list for the Detroit Fugitive Apprehension Team, they say he’s using the rap game to hide his real business.

“Every young kid wants to be an aspiring rapper, this guy produces talent locally here in Detroit.” Garcia said. “He has his company Big Hommie Records, he was using that as a front.”

Music videos still grace the internet, clues in the hunt for Richards and his accomplices.

Garcia says Richards was stopped by law enforcement with $400,000 in his possession.

“When law enforcement questioned him on it- he basically said, that’s not my money, and he just signed it off, forfeited the money, no big deal,” Garcia said. “$400,000 gone and that it that’s the kind of money we’re talking about with this guy.”

A key piece of evidence, a rented Phantom Rolls Royce.

“This Rolls Royce mysteriously pops up all over the country,” he said.

Garcia says is the car tied to Richards’ drug ring was documented carrying Snoop Dogg and his wife to rapper Nate Dogg’s funeral in Long Beach, California. He says the rolls was later spotted next to the Queen Mary Ocean Liner.

“He has access to everything, airplanes,” Garcia said.

He says it was after a bust at Greektown Casino in Detroit, the luxury car was found in the back of a semi-trailer just across the border in Indiana. The car, worth several hundred thousand dollars itself, was found alongside a Mercedes and $4 million worth of cocaine.

The drug ring was busted again earlier this year- a big victory for law enforcement with the capture of Richards’ cousin, the suspected kingpin of the organization who had been a fugitive for more than 10 years.

“DEA along with the U.S. Marshals arrested the main supplier Mark Jones in September,” Garcia said.
Now, they’re looking to close the book for good.

They say Richards is here in Detroit and certainly well known, bringing serious crime that can be stopped with one phone call from member of our own community.

“Drug dealing is a direct nexus to the violent crime,” Garcia said. “Drugs on the street is where we get a lot of the shootings, a lot of the murders.”

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: Scorsese] #874707
02/05/16 12:29 PM
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Feds: Fugitive who used rap label as drug cover caught
Tresa Baldas, Detroit Free Press 7:47 p.m. EST January 26, 2016
635894131096833073-richards.jpg
(Photo: U.S. Marshal Service)
He was known as Big Hommie, the man who spun local artists into rap stars through his Detroit record company.

But underneath the label lurked a high-ranking drug dealer who wound up on the U.S. Marshals Service's Most Wanted list, authorities claim, noting Big Hommie had been on the run for three years.

Tuesday morning, a defective taillight got him.

Dwayne Richards, the owner of Big Hommie Records — who hid from authorities after getting indicted in 2012 — was arrested during what started as a routine traffic stop on I-75 in Detroit, near Nine Mile.

Deputy U.S. Marshal Aaron Garcia said a Michigan State Police trooper pulled Richards over for a defective taillight on I-75 in Detroit sometime after midnight, triggering a chase that ended in Hazel Park.

"The trooper went to stop him. He took off," said Garcia. He said police cornered and arrested him.

Garcia, who got a call at 2:30 a.m. Tuesday about the arrest, commended the state police for their quick work.

"Obviously, we were excited. We were looking for this guy forever," Garcia said.

According to federal court documents, Richards is the last key figure in a massive drug investigation that has already netted several guilty pleas and landed the kingpin — his cousin — in prison in California. A key piece of evidence in the case, court records show, was a rented Phantom Rolls Royce, which mysteriously popped up all over the country over the years, including California and later in the back of a tractor-trailer in Indiana.

According to court documents, Richards' role in the operation involved using his record label as a cover for a drug ring that delivered massive amounts of cocaine all over the country.

"He did have his own label, but he used that as a front to launder money out of his record company," Garcia said, noting he did produce talent, but that he was using that to hide his criminal activity.

Richards appeared in U.S. District Court on Tuesday afternoon to face charges that accuse him of helping run a national Detroit-based drug operation that involved more than a dozen defendants — many of them who already have been prosecuted.

His attorney was not present on Tuesday, so he will be back in court next week for a formal arraignment. He is in federal custody in Detroit.

Re: detroit: The Phantom and the fugitive drug kingpin [Re: Scorsese] #883067
05/09/16 07:48 AM
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Drug accusations jeopardize future of legendary Detroit recording studio
By ROBERT SNELL
Comments Email Print
Detroit Legal Issues Real Estate Entertainment City of Detroit Crime/Courts Mike Duggan Detroit 2.0

Here is a sampling of albums and songs recorded at United Sound Systems Recording Studios:

John Lee Hooker, "Boogie Chillun"
Marvin Gaye, "What's Going On"
Bob Seger, "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man"
The MC5, "Back In The U.S.A."
Isaac Hayes, "Shaft"
The Red Hot Chili Peppers, "Freaky Styley"
Rolling Stones/Aretha Franklin, "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
Aretha Franklin & The Eurythmics, "Sisters Are Doin' it For Themselves"

Source: United Sound Systems
Correction appended

A landmark Detroit recording studio threatened by the I-94 widening project is in jeopardy again because the historic venue was bought with alleged drug money, according to federal court records.

United Sound SystemsRecording Studios, where Aretha Franklin, Bob Seger and Motown Record Corp. founder Berry Gordy recorded hits, factors into a bizarre case involving coast-to-coast manhunts, a $3 billion highway project and two alleged drug dealers, including one who had hair and eyebrow transplant surgery while hiding from federal agents, according to court records.

The federal court records chronicle a troubled chapter for the nation's oldest independent recording studio. The studio drew attention last year when Detroit City Council designated it a historic district. This means it would require city approval before the venue could be demolished to accommodate the widening of I-94.


Dwayne Richards: Trial set for June 7 in federal court in Ann Arbor.
Late last month, federal prosecutors asked a judge to have the Midtown property forfeited to the government because the studio allegedly was purchased with money from alleged drug dealer Dwayne Richards, according to a court filing. Richards, 44, who owned Detroit record label Big Hommie Records, was a fugitive for four years before being caught in metro Detroit in January.

The legal fight could give the Justice Department a prime piece of Midtown real estate and remove an obstacle slowing progress on the federally funded I-94 project. The project is being redrawn to potentially preserve the recording studio. But if the feds win, the Justice Department could simply sell the land, or give it to the state.

"If that place comes down, it will cut the heart out of the Detroit music business," said Royal Oak businessman Ed Wolfrum, the studio's chief engineer from the late 1960s through early 1970s.

Federal prosecutors are not using drug allegations as a ploy to seize the property for the I-94 widening project, said Gina Balaya, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Detroit.

Michigan Department of Transportation officials acknowledge the United recording studio, preservation efforts and Midtown's resurgence have complicated and delayed the widening project.

"We just don't know if we need the property or not," MDOT spokesman Rob Morosi said. "We never made an offer, primarily because we're still refining the design to minimize the impact in Midtown."

United Sound Systems is a two-story red brick home with a large rear studio addition at the corner of Antoinette Street and Second Avenue, north of I-94 in Midtown. The studio was established in 1933 and evolved from a venue that produced advertising jingles into a musical factory that hosted jazz greats, blues musicians and rock stars through the 1980s and 1990s.

Singer Marv Johnson recorded "Come to Me" at United in 1959, the first single released by Gordy before he opened Motown's headquarters, Hitsville U.S.A., less than two miles away.

By 2009, the studio had fallen into disrepair and foreclosure.



Family ties

The federal drug case, meanwhile, dates to November 2012 when alleged drug dealer Richards was charged in federal court with conspiring to distribute cocaine. Richards, however, disappeared, triggering a years-long manhunt.

U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents soon learned Richards was the cousin of a second fugitive accused of distributing drugs in Detroit, a California man named Mark Jones.

Jones had been shipping cocaine from California to Richards in metro Detroit since 2000, according to court records. Jones also disappeared that same year, but the drug investigation intensified in April 2011 when Indiana State Police troopers pulled over a car hauler. Inside, investigators found 40 kilograms of cocaine hidden inside a 2007 Mercedes-Benz and a 2006 Rolls-Royce Phantom bound for a Detroit-area customer.


Fugitive alleged drug dealer Mark Jones had hair and eyebrow transplant surgery while hiding from federal agents, according to court records. The inset image on the left was taken before his transformation.
Something was missing, however. The car hauler was built for three.

Inside the car hauler, investigators found paperwork for the missing car, a 2003 BMW 745i registered to Jones, the fugitive alleged drug dealer, prosecutors allege.

The Rolls-Royce and Mercedes-Benz were sold through luxury car broker Marc Laidler of Los Angeles, court records show.

After finding drugs inside the luxury cars in 2011, investigators analyzed Laidler's bank records and discovered more than $253,000 in cash deposited in Michigan, court records allege.

In January 2011, Laidler bought cashier's checks totaling $42,700 payable to Fine Touch Dermatology in Redondo Beach, Calif., according to court records. The checks included the notation "Shawn Burman" — an alias for Jones, the Califorinia fugitive who had been missing for 11 years, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Beck. The services purchased were hair and eyebrow transplant work, Beck wrote in a court filing. "These records included photographs which confirmed that the patient Shawn Burman was in fact Mark Jones."

After the surgery, Jones would stay missing for four more years until federal agents caught him near Los Angeles last fall. Jones, 51, is awaiting trial in a separate drug case in Mississippi.

Meanwhile, cooperating witnesses told agents that Richards was involved with or owned a music studio in Detroit, court records allege. The studio: United Sound Systems.

One witness said Richards' money was used to buy the studio, prosecutors alleged.

Property records show Richards' cousin Danielle Scott, a 43-year-old Redford Township resident who worked for the U.S. Postal Service, bought the foreclosed studio property for $20,000 in May 2009.

Another witness said Richards' wife Chynita, 39, oversaw day-to-day operations, booked artist recordings at United "and that drug transactions have taken place in the building."

Music wasn't the only other business venture for Dwayne Richards, prosecutors alleged. He was among the investors of the 2012 movie comedy "House Arrest."


Two years after the film was released, United Sound Systems reopened in 2014. One witness spotted Dwayne Richards inside, renovating the studio, prosecutors said.

In September 2014, MDOT officials met with Scott to talk about the I-94 widening project and the process for possibly buying or moving the studio, MDOT's Morosi told Crain's.

And, in May 2015, Chynita Richards and Scott testified in front of a City Council committee regarding the historic district designation.

"We really didn't know what we were getting into by reopening United Sound Systems recording studios," Chynita Richards told City Council members. "United Sound is such a gem in Detroit because we have so many hits that were recorded there."

Wolfrum, the studio's former chief engineer, visited the studio and said the new owners ripped out, in some cases, pioneering, innovative equipment that helped create United's sound.

"It's sort of wrecked now," Wolfrum said.

An earlier version of this story gave an incorrect date for when MDOT officials met with Scott to talk about the I-94 widening project.

In the shadows

The historic designation won't necessarily save the studio from being demolished for the I-94 project, said Peter Henning, a Wayne State University law professor and former federal prosecutor.

"If the federal government wins, they can do whatever they want with the property," Henning said. "That said, I think (U.S. Attorney) Barbara McQuade is very cognizant of the interests of the city, and I doubt she would want to wade into a fight by doing something that would get the city of Detroit mad."

When City Council approved the historic designation, a federal investigation involving the studio site continued in the shadows.

After analyzing Scott's bank accounts and flagging more than $33,000 worth of cash deposits and checks, federal agents and the U.S. Attorney's Office reached a conclusion.

"It appears that Dwayne Richards, a known cocaine trafficker, used Danielle D. Scott to try to conceal the movement of money and property that are the proceeds of his drug trafficking activities by purchasing" the studio, the prosecutor wrote.

Scott has not been charged with a crime. She did not respond to a message seeking comment.

The federal investigation reached a breakthrough in January when Dwayne Richards, the alleged drug dealer and fugitive, was finally located and arrested in metro Detroit.

He is being held without bond and set for trial June 7 in federal court in Ann Arbor. If convicted, Richards faces up to life in prison.

There is a strange continuity in the studio's history if the government's drug allegations are true, said Wolfrum, the former United Sound Systems chief engineer.

"My gosh, if you look at the history of that place, there were always nefarious characters," he said. "I worked with (singer) George Clinton there. Hell, there isn't anything he didn't put in his body."


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