The lead defendant in the Han Gil Hotel criminal case has
been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison on drug and gun charges, announced
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox.
Eric Dewayne Freeman, aka “Stuff,” pleaded guilty in June to
conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute heroin, possession of a
firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, and possession of a firearm
by a felon. Freeman was sentenced Friday afternoon before U.S. District Judge
Karen Gren Scholer alongside coconspirator Kendrick Lamel Washington, aka
“Kiki,” who pleaded guilty in May to conspiracy to possess with the intent to
distribute heroin and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug
trafficking crime. Washington was also sentenced to 30 years in federal prison.
Freeman, 44, and Washington, 40, are two of fifteen
defendants who have pleaded guilty in the Han Gil Hotel Town case, which has so
far resulted in charges against 22 individuals and one corporation associated
with the notoriously dangerous hotel.
“In the seven months since the feds shuttered the Han Gil,
defendants have confirmed what we already knew from our investigation – that
the hotel was a haven for drug dealers, human traffickers, and violent
criminals,” said U.S. Attorney Nealy Cox. “Two of the Han Gil’s most notorious
dealers will spend decades behind bars, where they can no longer peddle the
substances that have already shattered so many lives.”
“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 plea papers, Freeman and Washington both admitted that
they and other dealers routinely used so-called “trap rooms” within the Han Gil
Hotel to peddle and distribute heroin, methamphetamine and crack cocaine to
numerous customers. Users often smoked
or injected the drugs on hotel premises, which lay within 1000 feet of Dallas’
Herbert Marcus Elementary School.
Washington admitted that he acted as Freeman’s enforcer,
using tactics “designed to instill fear” in individuals Freeman believed had
stolen from him or owed him money. In December 2018, Washington used a cell
phone to record Freeman torturing a young woman with a butane torch, then
showed the video to numerous people inside the hotel.
Freeman, meanwhile, admitted that multiple drug overdoses
occurred in Han Gil Hotel rooms during the time the conspiracy was ongoing. The
bodies of some of those victims were removed from the hotel and dumped
elsewhere. DEA agents discovered the
corpse of a twenty year-old female victim who died in December 2018 decomposing
in Boren-Hilseweck Park in Oak Cliff almost a month after Freeman and two
others carried her body out of the hotel.
Law enforcement agents in Coppell, Texas also tied the heroin overdose
deaths of two Coppell residents that died in June and July 2018 back to the Han
Gil Hotel.
Freeman also admitted the owner of the Han Gil Hotel,
codefendant Su Y. Amos Mun, was aware that multiple armed drug dealers were
using the hotel to distribute drugs to hundreds of customers. He said Mun
charged dealers an inflated room rate, dubbed a “drug tax,” in exchange for
allowing them to openly 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.
Mun, 64, pleaded guilty in August to maintaining a drug
involved premises, admitting that for more than a year, he profited off dealers
openly selling quantities of heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and other drugs
from inside his hotel rooms.
As part of his plea agreement, Mun agreed to forfeit the Han
Gil Hotel, which is also the subject of a civil action filed by the U.S. Attorney’s
Office alleging the site functioned as a “safe haven for drug distributors” and
a “breeding ground for escalating criminal activity.”
The hotel has been shuttered since March 8, when a federal
judge granted prosecutors’ motion for a restraining order prohibiting the
hotel’s further operation and a task force of more than 50 agents and officers,
accompanied by several attorneys, converged on the Han Gil to effect arrests,
execute search warrants, and post notices requiring the immediate clearing of
the premises.
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
Scott Hogan, NDTX Civil Chief, Lindsey Beran, NDTX Deputy Civil Chief, and
Braden Civins filed the civil motion. 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.
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