Prostitution Bust nets Dozens of Arrests
Monday July 31st 2006, 8:20 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from wect.com-

Cumberland County authorities busted more than two dozen people in a prostitution sting over the weekend. “Operation John” brought 29 people into custody.

Female deputies working undercover walked along Highway 301 and East Mountain Drive. Authorities say they didn’t have to wait long before men approached them, offering money for sexual acts.

A number of women who approached male deputies and solicited them for sex were also arrested.

Authorities say one of the men taken into custody was David Alan Stewart. He ran in a primary against Cumberland County Sheriff Earl “Moose” Butler last spring and lost.



Cops Bust Drug Lab
Monday July 31st 2006, 8:18 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from starjournal.net-

By North Thompson

Barriere RCMP in conjunction with Clearwater RCMP and Kamloops PDS conducted a search warrant at a local Barriere residence on Friday, July 21.

Inside the residence quantities of various drugs and drug paraphernalia were located.

A small clandestine laboratory was located which police believe was used to make Crack Cocaine.

Three arrests were made at the scene, however as charges have yet not been laid, no names are being provided at press time.

Barriere RCMP also responded to a complaint in which a young female had been using a “Cobra” brand two-way radio in the area of Greentree Estates.

The female spoke on the radio and was answered by an unidentified male voice which invited the young female to attend the Barriere Elementary School to meet him and his dog.

The male asked to meet in five minutes.

Thankfully parents of the young female were with her at the time and took the radio away and prevented the girl from meeting the male.

At this time the Barriere RCMP have no suspects in this incident.

If anyone has any information regarding this or any other crime in Barriere please contact Crime Stoppers at 374-TIPS or Barriere RCMP at 672-9918.



Crime Stoppers Tip leads to Drug Bust
Monday July 31st 2006, 8:16 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from dailycitizen.com-

By Nick Schneider

Aided by information received from the anonymous Greene County Crime Stoppers telephone tip line and other local intelligence sources, officers from the South Central Narcotics Strike Force conducted coordinated raids Thursday that turned up quantities of methamphetamine, marijuana and several weapons.

Criminal charges are pending and warrants will be issued as the investigations continue, according to Greene County Prosecutor’s office investigator Julie Martin, who participated in the raid.

Further details of the investigation or suspects were not released - pending the issuance of arrest warrants in the case.

South Central Narcotics Strike Force (SCNSF) members from the Linton Police Department, Greene County Prosecutor’s Office and the Indiana State Police participated in a proactive narcotics investigation relating to illegal drug activity in Greene County.

“Investigations were conducted on individuals that were under court supervision, information that originated from Crime Stopper Tips, and other intelligence sources. As a result of this information, approximately one ounce of methamphetamine, a pound of marijuana and several weapons were confiscated,” Martin said.

The South Central Narcotics Strike Force is funded in part through an Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) from the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance and administered in Indiana by the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute. JAG funding allows states and local governments to support a broad range of activities to prevent and control crime based on their own local needs and conditions.
Martin said that information provided by Crime Stoppers remains an important and effective part in local investigations of illegal drug activity.

“Crime Stopper tips from the general public have proven to be an invaluable tool in law enforcement’s war on drugs,” she said.

Anyone with any information regarding drug activity is asked to call Crime Stopper’s at 847-5463 or the Indiana State Police Hotline at 1-800-453-4756.



Kanses Drug Trafficking
Monday July 31st 2006, 8:14 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from wibw.com-

Five years ago, a Salina police officer who stopped a truck for speeding uncovered 440 pounds of cocaine hidden in a false wall. At the time it ranked as one of the largest drug busts in US history.

Now days such seizures are becoming common in a state that sits at
the intersection of Interstates 70 and 135, known by law officers as two of the nation’s busiest drug corridors.

Troopers last year seized more than 14,000 pounds of marijuana and 1,360 pounds of cocaine. Also seized was 96 pounds of methamphetamine, 74 pounds of heroin and $1.4.

An extensive network in southeast Kansas recently was broken up,
and several people were arrested as part of a crack cocaine ring in
Parsons, Emporia and Coffeyville.



Austin man Busted with $2Million worth of Heroin
Monday July 31st 2006, 3:12 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from kxan.com-

Two million dollars in heroin — that’s what has a 68-year-old Austin man behind bars. Police say Narcisco Rodriguez-Jaimes was packing more than a dozen pounds of black-tar heroin when they stopped him at a San Antonio bus stop Saturday.He’s been charged with possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance — over 400 grams.Police say the man was changing buses at the time of his arrest. They wouldn’t say where he was going or coming from.


Gang links probed in north-end shooting
Monday July 31st 2006, 3:11 pm
Filed under: Gangster News

-from hamiltonspectator.com-

By Dana Borcea

Teen treated for gunshot wound

Hamilton police swept through a north-end housing survey Saturday looking for evidence in connection with a weekend shooting that sent a 19-year-old Hamilton man to hospital.

Central station Staff Sergeant Mark Simchison said police are investigating gang links and promised to increase police presence in the area in an effort to drive out criminals.

“If gangs want to operate in that complex, they can look forward to our officers coming in,” he said.

He added that there had been a recent spike in criminal activity in the public housing project north of Barton Street, bordered by James and MacNab streets.

Police said the shooting victim was brought to St. Joseph’s hospital at around 3 a.m. Saturday by taxi.

He was treated for a single gunshot wound to his abdomen and released.

Central Station Detective Bill Anderson said the victim may not have been the intended target.

“It may be a matter of an individual being at the wrong place at the wrong time,” he said. “We don’t know if he was the one being shot at.”

Anderson added it was too early in the investigation to comment on a possible gang link, but didn’t rule it out.

On June 13, two men confronted a 20-year-old Hamilton man in the complex and shot him in the leg.

Police do not think that incident was connected to Saturday’s shooting.

Some residents in the area said they were not convinced their survey was falling prey to gangs, but most agreed two shootings in six weeks was alarming.

A mother of three said a police officer had come to her door a few days before Saturday’s shooting with a stern warning.

He told her police anticipated some kind of “retribution” after a fight between two groups.

“He said gangs were taking over the survey,” said the woman, who did not want to be identified.

She added she did not think the groups of youngsters loitering around the complex were gang-affiliated.

But resident Rafael Penado said the fact that neighbourhood troublemakers weren’t wearing gang colours did not mean they were not organized.

“It’s a business,” he said. “Gangs are not what they used to be, but it’s still all about drugs.”

The father of three recently moved into the public housing complex with his wife Carla Trickett.

Now the couple’s lease is the only thing tying them to the troubled survey.

“We heard it was a rough neighbourhood,” said Trickett. “But we were not expecting gangs and shootings.”

Another resident said the survey used to be Bloods territory but that they had been pushed out a few years ago.

The woman, who did not want to be identified, said she was getting ready for bed early Saturday morning when she heard the piercing sound of several gun shots.

“I just dropped down,” she said. “That’s what you do around here when your hear shots.”

She added that like many residents, she found the packs of youngsters hanging around the survey intimidating but added she was mostly powerless to act.

“You keep your head down and go inside when there is trouble,” she said.

She said that while she would welcome more police in the area she doubts she would co-operate with them.

“It’s not worth the risk,” she said.

Detective Sergeant Ted Davis, head of Hamilton’s guns and gangs unit, said police depend on information from residents and promised them anonymity.

“If people have information we will treat it as extremely confidential,” he said.

Davis said he was not aware of a gang presence in the survey, adding it was too early to comment on the cause of the shooting.

Anyone with information is asked to call either Detective Sergeant Davis at 905-546-3810 or Crime Stoppers at 905-522-8477.

dborcea@thespec.com

905-526-3214



Police call slaying of teen in east Las Vegas gang-related
Monday July 31st 2006, 3:09 pm
Filed under: Gangster News

-from kesq.com-

LAS VEGAS Police say the slaying of a 16-year-old shot and killed as he walked away from a party early yesterday (Sunday) was probably gang-related.

Las Vegas police say officers heard gunfire and found the boy with fatal wounds to the chest, stomach and forearm about quarter-to-four yesterday (Sunday) morning.Initial reports are that the teen was walking with a girl on the city’s east side (near Lamb and Charleston boulevards) when he was shot.The slaying wasn’t far from where officers were breaking up a party (on Miner Way).It wasn’t far from where two young men were shot and killed June 11th while driving away from a graduation party.



Prostitution bust involves isles
Monday July 31st 2006, 3:08 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from starbulletin.com-

A Chicago-area man allegedly brought his prostitutes to cities including Honolulu

CHICAGO » A Chicago-area man has been charged with running a group of prostitutes, including underage teenage girls, who walked the streets of Hollywood, Honolulu and other cities, authorities say.

“So what? Some of my best girls were minors,” Jody L. Spears, about 35, whose last known address was in suburban Schaumburg, was quoted as saying in an FBI affidavit prosecutors filed in U.S. District Court.

Spears was arrested July 14 in a suburb outside Cleveland as part of an ongoing federal investigation federal officials have dubbed “Innocence Lost.” It focuses on an interstate prostitution ring allegedly headed by a pimp who went under the nickname Blue Diamond.

Others accused of being part of the ring have been charged in Hawaii and Michigan as well as Chicago.

In December, four Detroit men were charged in connection with the scheme — one of four nationwide prostitution rings being investigated under a federal program that targets human traffickers and promoters of child prostitution in the United States on an unrelated theft charge.

At least two underage girls from Hawaii who were recruited for the prostitution ring are cooperating with authorities.

The 25-page affidavit was unsealed Tuesday when Spears made a court appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Maria Valdez.

According to the affidavit, one young woman told agents she and Spears lived for a year in an apartment in Chicago’s Marina City owned by downtown dentist Gary S. Kimmel and received dental services from him.

Kimmel is facing federal charges that he accepted $405,000 from two pimps to buy, finance, insure and maintain luxury autos, including a Corvette and a Mercedes-Benz. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Various women were quoted in the affidavit as saying that Spears took them to New York, Las Vegas, Honolulu and other cities to work as prostitutes. One woman said Spears sent her to Los Angeles and told her to get a room in Hollywood and “work on Sunset Boulevard” to earn money.

She did — and landed in jail for two weeks, the affidavit said.

The female witnesses quoted in the affidavit — who were not identified by name — said Spears sometimes had them walk seedy “prostitution tracks” where patrons always knew they would be able to make contact.

One said Spears was upset when she came back from Memphis, Tenn., without enough money because her feet had hurt and she could not walk the track.

Women said they started working for Spears when they were 16 and 17 years old, and one girl told of starting out as a prostitute at age 14 and working for an associate of Spears when she was 15.

Officials said that the maximum for recruiting and transporting underage girls for prostitution under federal law is life in prison.