Repeat offender pled guilty to charges from Operation
Vanilla Gorilla
SAVANNAH, GA: A Bryan County man who was part of the gang
and drug trafficking conspiracy prosecuted under Operation Vanilla Gorilla has
been sentenced to nearly 16 years in federal prison.
Jessie Ray Hurt, 40, of Ellabell, Ga., was sentenced by U.S.
District Court Judge William T. Moore, Jr., to 188 months in prison to be
followed by four years of supervised release, said Bobby L. Christine, U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia. There is no parole in the
federal prison system.
Hurt, a convicted felon, was indicted in August 2018 by a
federal grand jury as part of Operation Vanilla Gorilla, an investigation
targeting the Ghost Face Gangsters, a violent, white supremacist street gang
operated largely from inside Georgia’s prison system. Hurt pled guilty in
October 2018 to Possession of 5 Grams or More of Methamphetamine and Possession
of a Firearm by a convicted felon.
According to facts presented in public records, court proceedings,
and court filings, federal, state and local enforcement identified Hurt as a
member of a drug trafficking organization through undercover purchases of
methamphetamine and a search of Hurt’s home. During the search, investigators
found a handgun, prescription narcotics, and a large quantity of
methamphetamine hidden in a compartment in the floor of Hurt’s bedroom. Police
also seized two shotguns, four rifles, a bucket of ammunition, and drug
trafficking paraphernalia.
Hurt’s criminal history spans 21 years, with convictions on
charges ranging from driving under the influence to multiple convictions for
possession, manufacturing and trafficking methamphetamine, and illegal firearms
possession. Most recently, he was released from state prison after serving
three years of a total 16-year sentence for violating probation, manufacturing,
and possessing methamphetamine, and illegal firearms possession.
“Our communities deserve better than to be victimized
repeatedly by career criminals who seem to serve only fractions of their
sentences before returning to the streets and to their illegal activities,”
said Bobby L. Christine, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia.
“This sentence of nearly 16 years in federal prison means Jessie Ray Hurt will
serve real time for his crimes, because there is no parole in the federal
prison system.”
“This sentence will ensure the incarceration of a dangerous
criminal and contribute to the restoration of order and peace,” said Beau
Kolodka, Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Atlanta Field Division of the
bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Far too many criminals take advantage of the overburdened
state penal system that provides them ample opportunity to avoid serious prison
time by routinely being let out early after serving only a fraction of their
court ordered sentence,” said Jamie Jones, Special Agent in Charge of the
Southeastern Regional Drug Enforcement Office of the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation. “Hurt’s refusal to learn from his prior bad choices and own
personal desire to continue his criminal lifestyle has finally caught up to
him. Almost 16 years of confinement in the federal prison system will certainly
provide him ample opportunity to ponder his decision to continue a life of
crime.”
This case was prosecuted as an Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) case by AUSAs Greg Gilluly and Tania Groover.
The OCDETF program is the premier United States Department of Justice
enforcement mechanism to identify and dismantle drug trafficking organizations.
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