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Friday 29 July 2011

Weapon found in gang member's cell,Riani, is a member of Chicago-based street gang Gangster Disciples, according to the sheriff's office.

James Riani wasn't just blamed for punching another inmate last week.

The detective who investigates crimes in the jail issued an arrest affidavit Tuesday stating Riani was caught with a 3-inch piece of metal in his cell.

Hernando County Sheriff's Detective Anthony Scarpati said the metal object – which had a string tied to the end of it and was hidden inside an air-condition exhaust vent – could have been used as an escape tool.

Either that or he could have used it as a weapon, Scarpati wrote.

The latest arrest comes days after he was charged with battery of a fellow inmate. Riani was accused of taking off his shirt, barging into another man's cell and accusing him of stealing from him.

He followed that by punching the man twice in the face, which caused the victim to lose consciousness, deputies said.

Assistant State Attorney Jason Smith, who is prosecuting Riani, said he considers him a dangerous criminal.

"Based on his history, I think that's reasonable to assume," Smith said.

Riani, a known gang member who goes by the nickname Wicked, was arrested in September 2010 on a litany of felony charges.

Deputies said Riani, 31, was seen riding a stolen motorcycle near his house the night he was arrested.

He tried to elude deputies, but fell off the bike, according to the sheriff's office.

After he was captured during a foot pursuit, he pulled out a 9mm handgun from his waistband, but it fell to the ground, deputies said.

He was searched and a loaded 9mm magazine was found tucked under his waistband, according to arrest records.

Deputies said they searched his backpack and found more weapons – including a loaded .40-caliber handgun and a 12-gauge shotgun with a filed-off serial number.

Aside from his weapons and drug counts, Riani also was charged with possession of a concealed handcuff key.

His trial is scheduled for Aug. 8, but most of his original charges have been dropped.

Smith said the U.S. District Attorney's Office might be pursuing the drug trafficking and weapons case against Riani.

However, Smith is still prosecuting the defendant for three felony charges related to his September 2010 arrest. Those charges are possession of a handcuff key, grand theft and habitual driving with a suspended or revoked license.


 

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Monday 18 July 2011

Aryan Brotherhood of Texas leader who wanted the man "in intensive care or dead by midnight

Fraught with a wild temper unleashed by a wicked methamphetamine addiction, April Flanagan was sent to prison just months ago for conspiring to help blow the heads off a disgraced Aryan gang member and his girlfriend in East Texas.
The order came from an Aryan Brotherhood of Texas leader who wanted the man "in intensive care or dead by midnight."
Across the state in Lubbock, Chasity Clark is accused of helping her husband, a general in an arm of the same gang, run an organized criminal enterprise and ditching gang computer files before police could confiscate them.
But neither can compare to Tanya Smith, whose Bonnie-and-Clyde-like run with her man began in Houston and ended with two police detectives killed, the boyfriend shot dead, and Smith serving life in prison.
Prosecutors contend the three women are part of the little-known world of "featherwoods," a nickname often worn with audacious pride as they live and die in the trenches of "white-boy gangs."
The Aryan Brotherhood of Texas and the Aryan Circle were born in Texas prisons a generation ago to defend white inmates. They have since expanded to include a variety of criminal enterprises with influence in Houston, as well as across the state.
And the collective stories of the women said to be featherwoods, according to court records, offer yet another gritty tapestry of lawlessness, bad deeds and dead ends.
"They have grown up in the lifestyle," said Brandon Bess, a Texas Department of Public Safety agent specializing in gangs. "I would say they were destined for it."
Their crimes and times get little publicity, although court cases reveal they stand alongside their men through murders, robberies and drug trafficking — or even when they are passed around like property among gang members, beaten, abused and sometimes killed.
One such gruesome demise came to Tonia Porras when she was 29. Her head was wrapped in duct tape and her body methodically stabbed 26 times, tortured to death by an ex-boyfriend just out of the Harris County Jail.
Lured police to deaths
Few featherwoods have shown such a flair for flagrant criminal conduct as Smith, 27, now in prison for life.
Smith, who lived in La Porte, was inked with rage, from the large red swastika in the center of her back to the black one atop her left foot. She is serving two life sentences for the murders of two Bastrop, La., police officers killed at a motel in 2007 after a run from the law.
Smith lured them into Room 111, where her armed Aryan Circle boyfriend, Dennis Clem, was hiding in the bathroom. The renegade couple had already driven at least 800 miles on a zigzag journey from Houston, where Clem used a semi-automatic rifle to kill two black teens, one 15 and the other 19, during a confrontation.
Among the supplies in the gray Chrysler sedan they used to flee Houston was a sawed-off shotgun and other guns, wrapped in a red blanket and stashed on the rear floorboard. A police radio scanner helped them evade authorities near San Antonio, when they bolted back east toward Louisiana.
"It was real Bonnie-and-Clyde stuff," recalled Geary Aycock, a Louisiana prosecutor. "They hit the ground running and did not mind doing whatever they had to do to protect each other."
The pair met in the Rio Grande Valley, where Smith grew up, and were busted together in 2005 trying to sneak through a Border Patrol highway checkpoint with a gun and marijuana hidden on a commercial bus. After brief prison stints, they were together again, breaking the law, on the run.
Video from the motel's surveillance camera captured images of the detectives driving up to the couple's room across the street from the police department. The police were not even looking for Clem and Smith, but rather an unrelated burglary suspect.
Smith let them in. Seconds later, they came running out; Clem gunned them down on the sidewalk before either could draw a gun.
Dressed in white and wearing sunglasses, Smith slipped away.
She was arrested two days later, hiding in a Houston mobile home park considered a haven for Aryan gangsters.
Shirtless and with a pistol in each hand, Clem charged outside and was cut down by police gunfire.
"Many people talk of going out in a blaze of glory, but not many truly do it," said a woman who is a part of an Aryan gang and asked that her name not be printed. "I just wish we had him with us and all those lives hadn't been lost."
Paths of desperation
Smith declined a request for an interview, relaying a message through a friend that she did not want to relive dark chapters in her life and is pursuing a theology degree.
Like many men associated with the gangs, the women's lives often follow predictable paths of desperation.
They weave and punch their way through broken homes, drug addiction, low-wage jobs and bouts with the law that see them - as well as those around them - in and out of incarceration.
"As far as the women are concerned … you wonder what is in it for them," said John Bales, the top federal prosecutor for the Eastern District of Texas, where a dozen Aryan Brotherhood of Texas members and featherwoods have recently been convicted of federal crimes.
"They are fascinated by the culture, usually have drug issues themselves, and there is a strange hold over the women that the guys have," Bales continued. "There is usually no good end to it."
As for April Flanagan, 31, who supplied the shotgun used in the planned double homicide, she is adamant that she does not share racist views and insisted that she got involved with Aryan Brotherhood members only to buy drugs.
She grew up with curfews and rules, said her mother, who noted that Flanagan was a phlebotomist and tried to take care of elderly relatives, as well as continue with school, when she began using methamphetamine.
"At that point in her life, she was so deep in the drug world that she was lost," said her mother, Dana Griggs.
She said her daughter pleaded guilty rather than stand trial and face a lengthier prison sentence.
Flanagan wore an orange jail jumpsuit and shackles during a Beaumont hearing in which she was sentenced to 15 years in prison; a half-dozen family members looked on while sitting side by side.
"She was basically backed into a corner, not given a chance to make facts known … ," said Griggs, who also denied Flanagan is a racist.
Dangerous ideology
Dena Marks, associate director for the Anti-Defamation League's southwest region, which includes Houston, said it is not just the gangs' crimes that are dangerous, but their ideology.
"It is important for people to understand that some of these acts are motivated by white supremacy," Marks said, noting that the ADL monitors both the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas and the Aryan Circle.
In another recent instance of women involved in Aryan Brotherhood brutality, Rachel Tutt in May was sentenced to 10 years in prison for her part in the 2009 kidnapping and beating of a Lufkin woman.
The victim's gang member boyfriend, Stephen "Cave Man" Wallace, thought she was trying to dump him.
Tutt, who was having an affair with Wallace, drove the car while he beat the kidnapped woman. They drove to a cemetery, where the beating continued.
She lived to testify; her attackers went to prison.
Tonia Porras, born in the Texas coastal town of Port Arthur, nearly escaped the featherwood life in 2005. Instead, the past caught her in a grisly way.
She had broken up with her Aryan Brotherhood boyfriend, Corey Schuff.
Fueled by jealousy and perhaps a rumor that Porras was talking to police, Schuff and another gang member attacked her.
Schuff stabbed her repeatedly, leaving wounds a medical examiner said were consistent with torturing someone to make them talk.
Porras' petite body was found lying beside the stuffed animals belonging to her child, who was not home, Jefferson County prosecutor Ramon Rodriguez Jr. said.
"If there were merciful forces at work, bludgeoning to the head knocked her out," he said. "Otherwise she suffered … what could be described as torture wounds."
During Schuff's trial, a dispatcher testified that Porras had made a panicked call asking for increased sheriff's patrols near her home after her ex-boyfriend was released from jail.
"She told me she definitely believed he was going to kill her," the dispatcher testified. "I believe he promised her he would do it."

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Mexican cartels are very, very powerful, and in a place like Miami that is heavily Hispanic, they've been able to blend right in.


Peacocks lounging in mango trees and coconut groves swaying with the ocean winds are part of the landscape in South Florida -- one of the world's favorite tourist destinations.
When the sun sets, the party scenes come alive at nightclubs and beaches where all kinds of drugs flow like the sea waves that ebb in and out of the coastline.
It seems that the golden days of Florida's cocaine trade hardly ended when law enforcement rounded up the state's legendary kingpins of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
One of the events from then that's etched in Miami's memory was the 1979 shooting spree reminiscent of Mexico's drug violence today.
Two men jumped out of an armored truck at the Dadeland Mall and shot two men inside a liquor store. Police identified the victims as a drug dealer from Colombia and his bodyguard.
"I was there when the mall shooting occurred," said George McNenny, a former U.S. Customs Service agent who retired in El Paso. "It was during the 'cocaine cowboy' days."
McNenny, a native of Havana, Cuba, also served in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as a special agent with assignments in various cities that included Miami.
Miami's "cocaine cowboys" era was marked by legends like Carlos Lehder and Max Mermelstein, both major drug barons, and Griselda Blanco, a Colombian woman whose Miami organization was suspected in at least 200 homicides. Drug violence was so rampant that Miami by then had the highest homicide rate in the United States.
Sandy Gonzalez, a former DEA official in El Paso and a native of Cuba, also served in the Miami area.
"After the 'cocaine cowboys,' the Colombians were the big guys, the cocaine source and suppliers, who dominated the drug trade in Florida," Gonzalez said. "The Cuban gangs were the distributors. After that, the focus changed to the Mexican cartels.
DEA busy
"The DEA's biggest division at the time was based in Miami, and we had a lot of agents working in Florida."
McNenny said "the Mexican cartels are very, very powerful, and in a place like Miami that is heavily Hispanic, they've been able to blend right in."
About a million Latinos of Cuban descent live in Miami. Other Latinos come from Puerto Rican, South American, Central American or Mexican backgrounds.
Gonzalez and other anti-drug investigators worked hard to disrupt the cocaine trafficking routes between Colombia, the Caribbean islands and Florida. He was part of "Operation BAT" that broke up the pipeline that the cocaine dealers had established through the Bahamas.
Fernando Vasquez, a retired Cuban businessman in Miami, said not much has changed since he arrived in Florida about 30 years ago.
Easy to get drugs
"It's very easy for people to get drugs in the Miami area," Vasquez said. "My work focused mainly on the tourist industry, and it was hard not to notice the drug scene. I remember the big deal they made when the police arrested the so-called 'cocaine cowboys,' but nothing's really changed."
Drug investigators said Mexican drug cartels, particularly the Sinaloa cartel run by Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman, have filled the void left by the earlier cocaine kings and queens.
Guzman's cartel is the same one that's waging a bloody battle at the border for control of the Juárez-El Paso smuggling corridor.
Florida has two designated High-Intensity Drug-Trafficking Areas (HIDTA's) that keep track of drug-trafficking in the north and south parts of the state.
"Colombian and Mexican (drug trafficking organizations) supply most of the available illicit drugs in the South Florida HIDTA region to African American, Caucasian, Cuban, Dominican, Haitian, Hispanic, Jamaican and Puerto Rican distributors, and to street gang members," according to the HIDTA's 2010 Market Analysis.
"Midlevel and retail-level drug distribution typically occurs at open-air drug markets, in clubs, apartment buildings, motels, and vehicles, (and) on beaches and at prearranged meeting sites such as parking lots," the report also said.
In other words, drugs are everywhere.
Sinaloa cartel
The Sinaloa cartel appears to have increasingly strong ties to Florida. Four years ago, a Gulfstream II jet crashed in Mexico's state of Yucatan stuffed with several tons of cocaine.
The cocaine and plane, which had first flown out of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., picked up drugs in Colombia and crashed in Mexico, belonged to Guzman. Guzman had bought 50 similar planes, Mexican authorities said.
Once the drugs arrive in South Florida, an estimated 370 street gangs work to distribute and sell them throughout the region, federal officials said.
Vasquez said, "The airport is one of the busiest in the world. An airplane departs or arrives at the Miami International Airport every 52 seconds."
That kind of air traffic is too tempting for drug dealers to resist. Last year, the DEA arrested 27 people at the Miami International Airport on suspicion of drug-trafficking.
The Miami Police Department tries to keep on top of drug law violators with a drug surveillance unit that supports the DEA and FBI, which have broader jurisdiction to handle international investigations. Miami Police Officer Jeffrey Giordano reported that one of the unit's recent cases netted six arrests in the 3000 block of Northwest 11th Place, along with the seizure of an AK-47 and ammunition.
"The charges ranged from possession of marijuana to possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted felon," Giordano said.
The levels of drug violence in Miami are not what they were in the 1980s, and they are far from the astounding numbers reported in Juárez, but the weapons and methods are the same.
Police said the latest trend they are battling in the Miami area is the proliferation of a clandestine pain-pill industry. Some of these drugs are made in labs in other U.S. states and brought into Florida to be dispensed by some of the pain-management clinics that popped up in recent years.
Lots of money
"There's a lot of money in Miami," said McNenny, who will appear in a History Channel special on the drug trade later this year. "And this also means there's going to be money-laundering."
This is evident from the new high-rises in beach communities where popular singer Gloria Estefan and her composer-husband Emilio Estefan have opened a couple of hotels and restaurants.
Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez, who recently split up, bought a $9 million penthouse in one of the new high-rises in a neighborhood filled with an endless list of other rich and famous people.
Another group emerging from South Florida's drug trade are Venezuelans. Authorities have traced some of the state's drug-trafficking to Venezuela sources.
Many affluent Venezuelan business owners moved to Doral, a young incorporated city in the Miami area, after disagreeing with the policies of controversial Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. They have set up their stores and services in Doral. And some are suspected of running money-laundering ventures.

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