Friday, November 3, 2023

Attorney General James Announces Takedown of Two Narcotics Rings Responsible for Trafficking Fentanyl Throughout Central New York and the North Country

 

31 Individuals Indicted and Charged with 192 Crimes Relating to Drug Trafficking and Weapons Offenses
Investigation Recovered Over 150,000 Packages of Fentanyl

New York Attorney General Letitia James and Syracuse Police Chief Joseph Cecile announced the indictment of 31 defendants charged with 192 crimes related to drug trafficking and weapons offenses in connection with two major drug trafficking networks that were distributing fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine, and cocaine in Onondaga, Oswego, Cortland, Jefferson, and St. Lawrence counties. As alleged in two indictments, the year-long investigation led to the seizure of more than 150,000 envelopes containing over $300,000 worth of fentanyl or a mixture of fentanyl and heroin. The investigation also recovered nearly a pound of methamphetamine, one-quarter kilogram of cocaine, more than $16,500 connected to narcotics distribution activity, three illegal firearms, and two vehicles used to transport and distribute narcotics.

“Opioids like fentanyl have torn apart communities across our state, and organized drug trafficking rings have fueled their spread,” said Attorney General James. “This takedown is part of my office’s ongoing efforts to roll back the deadly and destructive effects of the opioid crisis. We will continue to pursue and prosecute all those who peddle illicit drugs and I thank our partners in law enforcement for their critical support and collaboration in this investigation.”

“I would like to commend and thank not only our drug detectives, but also Attorney General James’ office and every one of our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners who made this lengthy and complex investigation a success,” said Syracuse Police Chief Joseph Cecile. “Thirty-one subjects thought they could peddle their poison of fentanyl, heroin, and cocaine on the streets of Syracuse and across five counties with impunity. They were wrong. Thanks to motivated professionals and strong partnerships, they were wrong.”

“Because of the critical partnerships and collaborative efforts with our law enforcement partners, a dangerous drug trafficking operation has been dismantled,” said New York State Police Acting Superintendent Dominick L. Chiumento. “Each arrest and each seizure saves lives and decreases the additional crimes that oftentimes coincide with these illegal drug operations. The arrests of these criminals reinforce our commitment that we will continue our aggressive posture in stopping the flow of these dangerous drugs into our neighborhoods. I thank the Attorney General’s Office and our law enforcement partners at all levels for their relentless efforts to keep illegal drugs off our streets.”

“Syracuse Police officers are working every day to combat illegal drug trafficking. I am deeply grateful for their efforts to protect our community from addiction and crime,” said Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh. “This crackdown is another example of the importance of effective collaboration at all levels of law enforcement to take down trafficking networks that are tearing communities apart. I thank the Syracuse Police Department Special Investigations Division, Attorney General James, and the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force for their dedicated efforts to put an end to this crisis.”

blockbuster suitcases

Suitcases containing “blocks” of fentanyl recovered by the investigation

Indictment One
The first indictment outlines the activity of the “Castro Group” — which was led by Bayron Castro, a/k/a “Hov” — and charges 23 people with 150 counts for their roles in selling controlled substances to customers residing in Onondaga, Oswego, Cortland, Jefferson, and St. Lawrence counties. The investigation revealed that Castro, with assistance from Miguel Cruz, Jose Cosme, Johnathan Delgado, Xavier Jackson, and others procured significant quantities of fentanyl from suppliers in Bronx County for distribution throughout Central New York and the North Country. Castro is charged with Operating as a Major Trafficker, which carries a mandatory life sentence in state prison.

The investigation recovered over 100,000 glassine envelopes containing fentanyl and heroin that Castro was storing and distributing from inside suitcases in a Syracuse apartment utilized by Jose Cosme. Castro and his associates supplied narcotics to Kwamea Jenkins and Shawn Gifford, alleged members of the Bricktown gang which operates within a multi-block area of the south side of Syracuse. During this investigation, several additional Bricktown members, including Lamell Davis, Keenan Scott, Devine Mobley, Jamar Sheppard, Jaidyn Freeman, James Odom, and Tevon Webb, were distributing fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine, and cocaine throughout Central New York and the North Country. 

Indictment Two
The second indictment outlines the activity of the “Pettiford Group” — which was led by Edward Pettiford, a/k/a “Buster” — and charges eight individuals with 42 counts for their roles in selling narcotics and methamphetamine and related events in Onondaga and Oswego counties. The investigation of this group revealed that alleged Bricktown member Malik Evans was distributing narcotics in Onondaga and Oswego Counties, and that Evans was supplied by Henry Townsend, a/k/a “Henrock,” and Brycedon James, a/k/a “Doodak,” both of whom were supplied by Pettiford.

During the course of the investigation, Townsend was involved in a shooting on West Newell Street in which he shot and injured an innocent civilian. In addition to drug trafficking charges, Townsend is being charged with Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree, Assault in the Second Degree, and related offenses in conjunction with this shooting. Additionally, Emanuel Jenkins, a/k/a “Lean”, who was present at Townsend’s residence during the shooting, is charged with Tampering with Physical Evidence for retrieving and hiding shell casings discharged in the shooting.

Recovered firearms and fentanyl

Recovered firearms and fentanyl  

blockbuster_recovered_fentanyl_and_other_narcotics
Recovered fentanyl and other narcotics
This takedown was the result of a joint investigation between the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF) and the Syracuse Police Department’s Special Investigations Division. The multi-agency investigation, code-named “Operation Blockbuster” due to defendants’ distribution of fentanyl in large quantities they referred to as “blocks”, brought together the resources of more than a dozen state, local, and federal enforcement agencies, including the Syracuse Police Department, Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office, Oswego County Sheriff’s Office, City of Oswego Police Department, Oswego County Drug Task Force, Drug Enforcement Agency Central New York Task Force, City of Fulton Police Department, New York State Police, New York State Intelligence Center, New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, Cortland County Sheriff’s Office, the Metro-Jefferson Drug Task Force, Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Border Patrol, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Marshal’s Service, and the Onondaga County Probation Department. The investigation included covert physical surveillance, thousands of hours of electronic surveillance, and multiple search warrants aimed at rooting out heroin, fentanyl, methamphetamine, and cocaine dealers operating in Central New York and the North Country.

The takedown marks another major drug bust in the Attorney Generals Suburban and Upstate Response to the Growing Epidemic (S.U.R.G.E.) Initiative, a law enforcement effort that brings together state and local law enforcement to target New York’s growing — and often violent — heroin, fentanyl, opioid, and narcotics trafficking networks. Since launching in 2017, SURGE has taken 909 alleged traffickers off the streets.

The 31 individuals who were charged with various crimes in relation to their involvement in the narcotics trafficking operation, that include various counts of Criminal Sale and Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance (class A, B, and C felonies), and Conspiracy to commit those crimes, as well as the charges related to the shooting on West Newell Street include:

Deion Bradley, 26 years old, Syracuse, NY
Bayron Castro, a/k/a “Hov”, 41 years old, Syracuse, NY
Jose Cosme, 54 years old, Syracuse, NY
Jean Carlos Cruz, 34 years old, Syracuse, NY
Miguel Cruz, a/k/a “G”, 36 years old, Liverpool, NY
Lamell Davis, a/k/a “Melly,” or “O’Melly,” a/k/a “Felix”, 29 years old, Syracuse, NY
Johnathan Delgado, a/k/a “Green Eyes”, 37 years old, Syracuse, NY
Malik Evans, a/k/a “Leek”, 35 years old, Syracuse, NY
Chad Firenze, 34 years old, Granby, NY
Terrah Frederick, 35 years old, Adams Center, NY
Jaidyn Freeman, a/k/a “Jaido”, 21 years old, Syracuse, NY
Shawn Gifford, a/k/a “Nani”, 36 years old, Syracuse, NY
Michael Hudgins, 36 years old, Syracuse, NY
Xavier Jackson, 29 years old, Syracuse, NY
Brycedon James, a/k/a “Doodak”, 24 years old, Syracuse, NY
Emmanuel Jenkins, a/k/a “Lean”, 32 years old, Syracuse, NY
Kwamea Jenkins, 23 years old, Syracuse, NY
Luis Miguel Joaquin, 35 years old, Bronx, NY
David Kalet, 36 years old, Port Byron, NY
James Kelley, 35 years old, Liverpool, NY
Christopher Lanzafame, 33 years old, Baldwinsville, NY
Docciana Mack, 34 years old, Syracuse, NY
Devine Mobley, 21 years old, Syracuse, NY
James Odom, 31 years old, Syracuse, NY
Edward Pettiford, a/k/a “Buster”, 30 years old, Syracuse, NY
Keenan Scott, a/k/a “Kasey”, 26 years old, Syracuse, NY
Jamar Sheppard, a/k/a “Ski”, 27 years old, Syracuse, NY
Carlos Torres, 30 years old, Syracuse, NY
Henry Townsend, a/k/a “Rock,” a/k/a “Henrock”, 28 years old, Syracuse, NY
Jeffrey Walts, 40 years old, Central Square, NY
Tevon Webb, a/k/a “Tay”, 28 years old, Syracuse, NY

The charges against the defendants are merely accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

The investigation was led by Syracuse Police Detective Travis Holmes and OAG OCTF Supervising Detective Tim MacConaghy, with the assistance of the U.S. Army National Guard Counterdrug Task Force, under the supervision of OCTF Assistant Chief Investigator John Monte and Deputy Chief Investigator Andrew Boss. The Attorney General’s Investigations Division is led by Chief Oliver Pu-Folkes.

NYS Office of the Comptroller - DiNapoli, Steuben Co. DA Baker, and State Police Announce Arrest of Former Addison Official

 

Office of the New York State Comptroller News

A longtime clerk-treasurer of the Village of Addison in Steuben County has been arrested for allegedly stealing more than $1.1 million in village funds over the course of at least 19 years, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli, Steuben County District Attorney Brooks Baker, and the New York State Police announced today.

“For well over a decade, Ursula Stone took advantage of her position and the trust of Addison residents to systematically steal over a million dollars from her community,” DiNapoli said. “Thanks to the work of my office and our partnership with District Attorney Baker and the State Police, her crimes were uncovered, and she now faces the consequences of her actions. I thank our law enforcement partners for their commitment to fighting public corruption.”

“This case represents the most complete, and to be frank shocking, breach of public trust I have encountered in 30 years as a Steuben County prosecutor,” Baker said. “The reality is that but for some real heads-up detection work by members of the State Comptroller’s staff it would still be on-going. Comptroller DiNapoli’s auditors picked up on some red flags village auditors missed, triggered an investigation and put in hundreds of hours to put this case together, with critical investigative assistance from the New York State Police Special Investigation Unit. Obviously, the case is just beginning, and we must presume the defendant innocent at this stage, but no matter what happens I, on behalf of the People of Steuben County and in particular the residents of the Village of Addison, extend huge thanks to Comptroller DiNapoli and the New York State Police for identifying the problem, stopping the bleeding and putting in the time to put us in a place to make justice happen in this case.”

“I commend the diligent work of our State Police members and our partners at the State Comptroller’s Office and Steuben County District Attorney’s Office for putting an end to this deceitful plan,” New York State Police Acting Superintendent Dominick L. Chiumento said. “Ms. Stone selfishly took advantage of her position to profit at the expense of taxpayers and the local community that she was supposed to be serving.  We have no tolerance for any type of public corruption and the State Police will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to hold all of these such persons accountable.”

DiNapoli’s office began an audit of the village in 2022 and found the 55-year-old Stone had been running the financial operations of the village with no oversight or accountability. She prepared payroll, maintained manual leave records, and processed health insurance buyouts and unused leave payments with no review or approval from the mayor or any other village official. 

DiNapoli’s office also discovered that checks from the Addison Central School District, payable to the village, were not deposited into the village’s accounts. A joint investigation by DiNapoli’s office, the New York State Police, and the Steuben County District Attorney’s Office determined that Stone allegedly stole not only the school district’s checks, but also dozens of other checks payable to the village, which she converted to certified bank checks and cashed.

Additionally, investigators found Stone gave herself unauthorized pay raises, took time off without deducting it from her leave credits, and wrote herself checks for unauthorized health insurance buyouts from village funds. Stone had also been cashing out unused vacation time since 2004, an option that was only available to employees who resigned or retired.

Further, Stone gave insurance buyouts to one employee and awarded a large separation payment to another employee, making $73,666 in payments that were not authorized.

Stone resigned in March 2023 during the course of the  investigation. Before submitting her resignation letter, she wrote herself a final check for $26,613, which was not authorized by the board. The board stopped payment on the check before she was able to cash it.

In total, investigators say she stole $1,171,362.

Stone, who worked for the village from 1997 until her resignation, was charged with one count each of Grand Larceny in the 1st degree, Money Laundering in the 2nd degree, Corrupting the Government in the 1st degree, Public Corruption, Attempted Grand Larceny in the 3rd degree, Attempted Public Corruption and 185 counts of Falsifying Business Records in the 1st  degree, all felonies. She was arraigned before Judge Chauncey Watches of Steuben County Court and $20,000 in bail was set. She is due back in court on Jan. 24, 2024. 

Since taking office in 2007, DiNapoli has committed to fighting public corruption and encourages the public to help fight fraud and abuse. New Yorkers can report allegations of fraud involving taxpayer money by calling the toll-free Fraud Hotline at 1-888-672-4555, by filing a complaint online at https://www.osc.state.ny.us/investigations, or by mailing a complaint to: Office of the State Comptroller, Division of Investigations, 8th Floor, 110 State St., Albany, NY 12236.

VCJC News & Notes 11/3/23

 

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
News and Notes

Here's this week's edition of the VCJC News and Notes email. We hope you enjoy it and find it useful!

Reminders

  1. Shabbos

    Shabbos information is, as always, available on our website, both in the information sidebar and the events calendar.
    Here are the times you need:  
    Shabbos Candles Friday 11/3/23 @ 5:32 pm
    Shabbos morning services at 8:40 am.  Please join the services if you can do so safely. 
    Shabbos Ends Saturday 11/4/23 @ 6:35 pm
     

  2. Eastern Standard Time
    starts in the wee hours of Sunday morning.  Set your clock back 1 hour Saturday night and get back that hour of sleep you lost in the spring.

  3. Help VCJC Support Israel as it recovers from and responds to the terrorist attack from Hamas.
    VCJC urges you to help support Israel following the terrorist attack perpetrated by Hamas. We have set up a webpage at https://vcjc-israel.brizy.site/ where you can get some more information. That page will direct you to the UJA Federation’s Israel Emergency Fund page where you can make a donation directly to the fund.

    You can go directly to the UJA page from here, if you prefer.

    There are many ways in which we can support Israel in this hour of need, as it recovers from the brutal attack and tries to remove Hamas as a player on the world stage.

    If you wish to provide support, but prefer to use another channel, you can find a list of channels here.

    If you do make a donation as a result of the VCJC, we’d love to hear about it! Please drop us a note.

  4. Election Day is Tuesday Nov 7.  Vote!

Our mailing address is:

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
3880 Sedgwick Ave
Bronx, NY 10463

Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson - Community Resources & Updates

 

Dear Neighbor,

 

Thank you for joining us for another week in review. 


These last couple of weeks have taken a great toll on many of us as we have watched the Israeli-Palestinian conflict claim the lives of innocent people, most of them children. Our hearts ache for all the lives lost.


Recently, we have seen an increase in antisemitic and Islamophobic hate crimes. The surge in hate crimes targeting our Jewish and Muslim communities in New York and across the country is completely unacceptable.


Now more than ever it is important for us to come together and denounce all forms of hate.


We will be working closely with our colleagues in government and the New York Police Department to ensure the safety of our residents. 


To report a hate crime or any emergency, call 911. Non-emergencies should be reported to the local precinct. Individuals can also call 877-NO-HATE-NY to provide any tips relating to hate crimes. To report any discrimination that violate the NYC Human Rights Law, you may also make a complaint with the City Commission on Human Rights.


As always, if you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact our office at 718-590-3500 or email us at webmail@bronxbp.nyc.gov.

 

In partnership,

Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson



IN THE COMMUNITY


The ongoing Opioid Crisis is a public health crisis. It has claimed over 500,000 lives since the start of the new millennium and continues to be one of the leading causes of death in the United States.


Thanks to Governor Kathy Hochul and Attorney General Letitia James, New York State is receiving more than $2 billion through various settlement agreements with opioid manufacturers and pharmaceutical companies. A portion of the funding from these settlements will go directly to municipalities, with the remainder deposited into a dedicated fund to support prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and recovery efforts to address the ongoing opioid epidemic.


Thank you to my colleagues in government for working to address this crisis.



Thank you to the Consul General of Italy in New York, Fabrizio Di Michele for coming up to the Northern Borough for a guided tour through the Bronx's Little Italy with our Belmont Business Improvement District.



Little Italy is a Bronx gem that has been a beacon for Italian Americans for generations and highlights the very best of Italian culture, entrepreneurship, and perseverance in our Borough. A special thank you to all of the businesses we were able to visit.



To watch October's Ask the BP episode, click here.


COMMUNITY EVENTS