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Ex-Adviser to Jamaican Drug Lord Is Helping Build Case Again

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  • Ex-Adviser to Jamaican Drug Lord Is Helping Build Case Again

    New York Times, May 22, 2012

    Ex-Adviser to Jamaican Drug Lord Is Helping Build Case Against Him
    By BENJAMIN WEISER

    A former longtime senior adviser to Christopher M. Coke, the Jamaican drug lord who pleaded guilty last year to federal conspiracy charges in Manhattan, has been cooperating with the authorities to help build the criminal case against his former boss, a new court filing shows.

    The former adviser, identified only as John Doe in the filing, had been a bodyguard and close aide to Mr. Coke’s father, Jim Brown; his tenure began in the 1980s, when Mr. Brown ran what prosecutors say was the Jamaican criminal organization that his son, Mr. Coke, eventually took over.

    “Over time, I became, in essence, a trusted senior counselor to the organization,” the former adviser said in a 26-page statement filed Monday evening in Federal District Court in Manhattan.

    The organization, called the Shower Posse, was based in Tivoli Gardens, a garrison community in Kingston, and it became involved in murder, extortion, armed robbery, and narcotics and firearms trafficking, the former adviser wrote.
    In 2010, Mr. Coke was extradited after a monthlong manhunt in Jamaica that left more than 70 people dead. When he pleaded guilty last August, he admitted he had led the organization, which he said had distributed crack cocaine and other drugs in Jamaica and the United States, including in the Bronx.

    The government’s disclosure that it had obtained the cooperation of two insider witnesses came on the eve of a court hearing Tuesday at which prosecutors are expected to present their case that Mr. Coke, 43, should receive the maximum sentence possible, 23 years.

    Mr. Coke has written to the judge, asking for leniency; and his lawyers have made it clear in court papers that they planned to attack the government’s depiction of their client, as they put it, “as a murderous scoundrel, whose evil knows no bounds.”

    The judge, Robert P. Patterson Jr., called the hearing after prosecutors said they wanted to introduce evidence against Mr. Coke that went beyond the crimes for which he was convicted. Mr. Coke, for example, admitted in his plea to conspiring in a single assault, of one man who owed a drug debt.

    The witness is one of two former members of Mr. Coke’s group who are described as having assisted in the investigation of the trafficker by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan.

    The office of Preet Bharara, the Manhattan United States attorney, indicated in the filing that it did not plan to call the former counselor to testify at the hearing; rather, his written statement would be used to bolster the government’s case.

    But the office said it did plan to call another former high-level member of Mr. Coke’s organization, who it said was also cooperating. “That witness is expected to describe, among other things, brutal murders, beatings and other acts of violence that were committed by Coke or at his direction,” prosecutors wrote. This witness is not named in the filing, but would presumably be identified after taking the stand.

    This witness, prosecutors said, would also detail how Mr. Coke armed his crew of loyal “soldiers,” which sometimes numbered more than 200, with guns that he illegally imported from the United States, and how he used women from Tivoli Gardens to smuggle cocaine into the United States.

    It is the former counselor to Mr. Coke, though, who appears to have had the longest and closest relationship to the defendant, who took over his father’s organization in the early 1990s, prosecutors said.

    In 1992, for example, Mr. Coke, also known as Duddus, told the adviser that he needed to obtain more high-powered weapons in order to have more power, both within the group and in Jamaica.

    “The older members of the organization needed to understand that he [Duddus] would be running the organization now,” the witness wrote.

    The witness said Mr. Coke’s crew included teenagers as young as 14, who ran errands or acted as lookouts until they were old enough to be given weapons. The witness also described Mr. Coke’s brutal code of discipline, and how he once ordered his men to shoot as many people as possible on a street associated with a suspected informer. “I later learned that four or five people were shot,” including two women, the witness wrote.

    In smuggling arms into Jamaica from the United States, Mr. Coke's group packaged firearms inside refrigerators and other appliances, and handguns and ammunition inside food shipments, like rice and flour, the witness said.

    The witness admitted in his statement that he had been involved in cocaine trafficking for more than a decade, and that at times he had lied to the American authorities. He said he eventually pleaded guilty to conspiracy, and received a long prison term.

    The witness said he hoped that his cooperation would lead to his being given a new sentence of time served.
    Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
    - Langston Hughes

  • #2
    Hold on.. Skengy nuh did missing up fi a good portion dis year ?

    hmmm...

    Comment


    • #3
      u neva know me a member adi clique

      Comment


      • #4
        Talk di tings Skengy. a no the feds alone must have your info.

        Comment


        • #5
          Stumbo

          More information has been released detailing the illegal activities of Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke, who pleaded guilty to racketeering, conspiracy and conspiracy to commit assault in aid of racketeering in the United States last year.

          A document filed by US prosecutors in the Southern District Court of New York gives extensive details about Coke’s rise and rule of the Shower Posse in his native Tivoli Gardens in West Kingston.

          The document entitled ‘Declaration in connection with the sentencing of Christopher Michael Coke’ is a 26-page statement by a unidentified cooperating witness.



          It covers the Coke Family, the Shower Posse organisation, acts of violence, firearms trafficking, cocaine trafficking and extortion.

          The statement introduces the informant’s association with Jim Brown, Coke’s father as a bodyguard and his acquaintance with Jah-T and Dudus. He describes the Shower Posse organisation as one involved in murder, extortion, armed robbery, narcotics and firearms trafficking in Jamaica and United States.

          The statement says that Coke provided certain services to the community, some arising out of Government contracts. For these projects , Coke, would deduct from the salaries a portion of funds as a contribution to the ‘system’. These funds were then used in illegal activities.

          The document states that Coke also held treats and dances in the community and provided humanitarian services to community members on a needs basis in exchange for loyalty and goodwill.

          The statement described Coke as a violent individual, who maintained a strict code of discipline and frequently ordered and participated in acts of violence against individuals who violated his code of conduct.

          In one instance, shortly after the death of his brother Jah T, Coke approached an elder of the Shower Posse, known as “Stumbo” on Ebenezer Lane in West Kingston. Coke asked “Stumbo” if he was with or against him. Stumbo appeared hesitant. Coke then fired a handgun over Stumbo’s head and shortly after Stumbo agreed to support Dudus.

          Coke is also described as keeping an army of 200 gunmen loyal to him. These gunmen ranged in ages from 14 to 40 years. These men were paid as enforcers.

          The document also says that these “Shotters” were deployed to campaign on behalf of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP).

          These “Shotters” went door to door in different areas using intimidation at times to ensure Jamaicans voted JLP.

          The cooperating witness also detailed an incident in which an enforcer known as Screbeng committed a robbery without Coke’s permission. In the robbery Screbeng lost a firearm issued by the Shower Posse organisation. After the robbery, Coke spoke to Screbeng giving him a number of days to recover the firearm. Coke said Screbeng would have been killed immediately if it wasn’t for his past actions in freeing another gunman from police custody in the Kingston Public Hospital. Screbeng, however, did not accede to Coke’s request and was subsequently shot and killed in his home in Denham Town.

          The statement also spoke to Coke ordering thugs to shoot up Maxfield Avenue, him ordering the murder of parents of men who did not send money from the US to fund his gun operations and Coke also participating in the shooting of a troublesome enforcer who had developed a crack cocaine and stealing habit.

          Coke is also described as having an affinity for guns and ensured he had "heavy machinery". The document said that Coke favoured an assault rifle manufactured by HK which uses 7.62 millimeter rounds.

          According to the informant, Coke referred to the gun as the "Bomber".

          For handguns, Coke reportedly favoured the Glock and the Desert Eagle, but said that the Desert Eagle was too big to carry around.

          Comment


          • #6
            sound like Don Corleone !

            doubt there will be any God Faddah movies on his exploits doh..

            Comment

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