CHARLOTTE, NC—Twenty-seven alleged
members of the United Blood Nation gang were arrested on Friday, May 18, 2012
and charged with racketeering and related charges. The 35-count indictment was
unsealed today in U.S. District Court in Charlotte.
Today’s announcement is made by Anne M.
Tompkins, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina; and Chris
Briese, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
Charlotte Division.
According to the indictment, which was
returned by a grand jury on May 16, 2012, the defendants conspired to
participate in a racketeering enterprise; that is, the United Blood Nation
(“UBN” or “Bloods”) and several factions of the UBN. The indictment alleges
that from 2007 to May 2012, in the Western District of North Carolina and
elsewhere, the defendants conspired to operate as a gang. In doing so, the
indictment alleges that the defendants engaged in criminal activities,
including racketeering conspiracy, murder conspiracy, narcotics trafficking,
armed robbery, and firearms related crimes.
Charged in the indictment are:
■ James Anderson, a/k/a “Stank,” 28,
currently incarcerated;
■Alan Boyd Donta Barnett, a/k/a “Big Al,”
37, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Eric Eugene Brice, a/k/a “Bug,” 40, of
Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Travis Lamar Brice, a/k/a “Trap,” 28,
currently incarcerated;
■Quinton Lavar Brown, a/k/a “QP” or “QB,”
20, currently incarcerated;
■Rafas Gene Camp, a/k/a “Tick,” 32, of
Shelby, North Carolina;
■Joston Jamal Clemmer, a/k/a “Ace,” 21,
of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Kemmey Nicole Cooke, a/k/a “ Gangsta
Wu,” 29, of Chesapeake, Virginia;
■Jaimel Kenzie Davison, a/k/a “I-Shine,”
28, currently incarcerated;
■Wesley Tyler Floyd, a/k/a “West Coast,”
26, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Davon Yakeen Futrell, a/k/a “Smooth,”
24, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Tristan Daquane Goode, a/k/a “Buck,” 20,
of Ranlo, North Carolina;
■Nathaniel Graham, a/k/a “Nasty,” 23,
currently incarcerated;
■Joseph Dranell Gray, a/k/a “Killa,” 38,
currently incarcerated;
■Dominque O’Neill Jackson, a/k/a “DJ,”
23, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Jimmy Lionell, Jones, a/k/a “Buddhist”
or “Buddha,” 37, currently incarcerated;
■William Amir Knox, a/k/a “Poo Nuk,” 28,
currently incarcerated;
■Kentrell Tyrone McIntyre, a/k/a “Mustafa,”
32, currently incarcerated;
■William Lewis Dontars Meeks, a/k/a “Willie”
or “Rock,” 34, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Kevin Jerome Morris, a/k/a “Kato,” 34,
of Shelby, North Carolina;
■Franklin Robbs, a/k/a “Frankie Boo,”
41, currently incarcerated;
■Maurice Terrell Robinson, a/k/a “Hell
Rell,” 22, of Lincolton, North Carolina;
■Andrew Eugene Stowe, a/k/a “Coco,” 36,
of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Marquise Deshawn Watson, a/k/a “ Rambo,”
20, of Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Melinda Charmane Watson, 36, of
Gastonia, North Carolina;
■Daryl Wilkinson, a/k/a “OG Powerful,”
47, currently incarcerated;
■Samatha Williams, a/k/a “Samantha
Wilkinson” or “Lady Sam,” 43, of Bronx, New York;
■Perry Gorontent Williams, a/k/a “P-Flame”
or “Flame,” 26, currentlyincarcerated.
According to allegations contained in
the indictment, as part of the conspiracy, the defendants engaged in drug
trafficking and used the proceeds of their drug crimes to help finance the
gang’s criminal activities. In addition to drug trafficking, the indictment
alleges that the defendants committed armed robberies and armed home invasions
in order to generate proceeds to support the enterprise. The indictment also
alleges that as part of the conspiracy, the defendants committed acts of
violence against rival gang members. Allegations contained in the indictment
also state that the defendants concealed their criminal activities and
obstructed justice, including threatening potential witnesses. The indictment
further alleges that the defendants maintained and circulated a collection of
firearms for the use in criminal activity by UBN members.
The indictment alleges that the
defendants and other UBN gang members in North Carolina and elsewhere
identified gang members belonging to other UBN or Bloods factions by their gang
names and phone numbers, including telephone area codes. For example, the
indictment alleges, area code “704” represented gang factions within
Mecklenburg and Gaston Counties. The indictment also alleges that gang members
identified other gang members who were incarcerated by their street gang names
and by their inmate identification numbers, in lieu of their telephone numbers.
The members incarcerated were referred to as “behind the G wall,” the
indictment alleges.
According to the indictment, as gang
members of the UBN enterprise, the defendants met regularly with other UBN
members. The indictment alleges that during those meetings, gang members talked
about past acts of violence and other crimes against rival gang members, about
UBN gang members who had been arrested or incarcerated, about police
interactions with gang members, and discussed internal disciplinary action of
other UBN members. The indictment further alleges that during these meetings,
gang members also shared identities of individuals whom they suspected to be
cooperating with law enforcement and discussed the types of action that ought
to be taken against those individuals. The indictment further alleges that
during these meetings, UBN members also planned and agreed to carry out future
crimes, including murder, robbery, and drug trafficking.
“Street gangs spread violence in our
cities and fear in our neighborhoods. Gang members engage in a range of illegal
activities, from drug trafficking to armed robbery to conspiracy to commit
murders. Through coordinated enforcement actions, we will pursue relentlessly
dangerous gangs and dismantle their illegal activities that bring violent
crimes to our streets and erode the stability of our communities,” said U.S.
Attorney Tompkins.
“The FBI is committed to dismantling the
gangs that threaten the safety and stability of our neighborhoods. This
two-year investigation is an outstanding example of what federal, state, and
local law enforcement can accomplish when we attack the gangs that operate in
our communities,” said FBI’s Special Agent in Charge Chris Briese.
The charges contained in the indictment
are allegations. The defendants are presumed innocent unless and until they are
proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
The case is being investigated by the
FBI in cooperation with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives; the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation; the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department; the Gastonia Police Department; the
Gaston County Police Department; the Gaston County Sheriff’s Office; the Shelby
Police Department; and North Carolina Department of Probation and Parole.
The prosecution is handled by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Jill Westmoreland Rose and Thomas Kent of the U.S. Attorney’s
Office.
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