The lead defendant in the Han Gil criminal case pleaded
guilty today to gun and drug charges, announced U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox.
Eric Dewayne Freeman, aka “Stuff,” pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute a Schedule I controlled
substance, possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime,
and possession of a firearm by a felon.
Freeman, 44, is the seventh defendant to plead guilty in the
Han Gil case, which has so far resulted in charges against 18 individuals and 1
corporation associated with the notoriously dangerous hotel.
“In his plea, Mr. Freeman admitted that the Han Gil was a
haven for drug dealers and violent criminals like himself,” said U.S. Attorney
Erin Nealy Cox. “But we knew that based upon the efforts of our investigative
team. The Han Gil posed a significant danger to our community, and we’re
gratified we succeeded in shutting it down completely.”
“The DEA will pursue investigations, much like the Han Gil
Hotel case, until these places are extinct,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge
of the Dallas Division Clyde E. Shelley, Jr.
In his plea papers, Freeman admits that he and dealers on his
payroll routinely used so-called “trap rooms” within the Han Gil to distribute
heroin, methamphetamine and crack cocaine to numerous customers. (Other drug
dealers unaffiliated with Freeman used multiple other guest rooms within the
hotel in a similar manner.) The users often smoked or injected the drugs inside
the trap rooms where drugs were peddled or on hotel premises, which were within
1000 feet of Dallas’ Herbert Marcus Elementary School.
Freeman admitted that two overdose victims died inside rooms
at the Han Gil, and their bodies were dumped elsewhere. DEA agents discovered
the corpse of a young woman, who died on December 27, 2018, decomposing in the woods almost a month after
Freeman and two others dragged her body out of the hotel, he conceded.
Freeman further admitted the owner of the Han Gil,
codefendant Su Y. Amos Mun, was aware of the drug dealing, overdoses, and body
dumping. He said Mun charged dealers an inflated room rate, dubbed a “drug
tax,” in exchange for allowing them to deal out of trap rooms.
Mun collected thousands of dollars from Freeman alone, and
often tipped off dealers before law enforcement or city officials arrived for
inspections, Freeman said in his plea papers, in which he also admitted that on
at least one occasion, he discharged a handgun during an argument over some
allegedly stolen drugs.
The hotel – which Mr. Freeman admitted was routinely mired
in criminal activity, including drug dealing, unlawful possession of firearms,
prostitution and other crimes – was raided on March 7 by a taskforce of more
than 50 agents and officers concerned about rampant drug use and escalating
criminal activity.
In addition to charging Freeman, Mun, and more than a dozen
other conspirators using the hotel, the government moved to shut down the Han Gil,
which the Court agreed “endangers the general welfare of the community.”
Freeman now faces a sentence of 10 years to life in federal
prison.
Mun, meanwhile, has entered a plea of not guilty. The
Indictment against Mun is a formal accusation of criminal conduct, not
evidence; like all other defendants, he is innocent until proven guilty. Mun
has moved to postpone his trial, which is currently set for July 29.
The Drug Enforcement Administration conducted the
investigation with assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Coppell
Police Department, Dallas Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms & Explosives, the U.S. Marshal’s Service, Grand Prairie Police
Department, Arlington Police Department, Grapevine Police Department, Lancaster
Police Department, the State Department, IRS, U.S. Postal Inspection Service,
Plano Police Department, Farmers Branch Police Department, Homeland Security
Investigations, Garland Police Department, Rowlett Police Department, Denton
Police Department, Lewisville Police Department and McKinney Police Department.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Rick Calvert, Chief of NDTX’s Narcotics Section, and
Phelesa Guy, Deputy Chief of the Narcotics Section, are prosecuting the
criminal case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Lindsey
Beran, NDTX Deputy Civil Chief, is handling the civil case.
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