NEWPORT NEWS, VA—Phillip Michael Bryant,
25, of Brooklyn, New York, was indicted by a federal grand jury yesterday for
participating in a criminal organization that engaged in acts of violence
including murders, narcotics distribution, and weapons violations in the
Lincoln Park Housing Development in Hampton, Virginia. Bryant was previously
indicted in March on drug and firearm charges. He was recently arrested in
Albany, New York.
Neil H. MacBride, United States Attorney
for the Eastern District of Virginia, made the announcement following return of
the superseding indictment. Bryant was charged with the murders of two
individuals while using a firearm, which are death eligible offenses subject to
a decision by the United States Attorney General.
“Phillip Bryant and members of his gang
allegedly came from New York and spread fear and violence—including multiple
murders—to maintain a crack cocaine trafficking operation in the Lincoln Park
Housing Development in Hampton,” said U.S. Attorney MacBride. “These charges
are a result of the dedicated work of the FBI Safe Streets Task Force and
Hampton Police Division to hold those responsible for these murders
accountable.”
According to the superseding indictment,
the defendant and others were part of a criminal organization known locally as
the “New York Boys,” a neighborhood set of the national gang known as “the
Bloods.” The New York Boys members and associates engaged in trafficking
cocaine base, cocaine, and marijuana brought from New York for sale in Lincoln
Park. The alleged gang members are accused in the indictment of protecting
their criminal enterprise and activities through the use of intimidation,
violence and threats of violence—including the murders of Sean McCracken on
November 1, 2009 and Johnny Avery on March 19, 2010.
This case was investigated by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation Safe Streets Task Force and Hampton Police
Division. Assistant United States Attorneys Howard J. Zlotnick and Lisa R.
McKeel are prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.
Criminal indictments are only charges
and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed to be innocent until and
unless proven guilty.
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