Dear drug users........

Looks like your fix may be delayed by a few days.

Courtesy of the Hamburg Sun,

Major drug bust includes arrests of local residents
Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the takedown of a highly organized drug distribution organization which spanned from Southern California to western New York.

During the investigation, approximately one and a half kilograms of cocaine, more than 650 grams of marijuana, and approximately $200,000 cash were seized.

Three separate indictments charge 23 people with various crimes, including criminal possession and/or sale of cocaine and criminal possession of marijuana.

Among the local residents arrested were the following:

• Jason Chudzik of Lake View
• William Herdman of Angola
• Eric Williamson of Blasdell
• Travis Yates of Lake View
• Matthew Hoak of Hamburg
• Michael Bannister of Blasdell
• Eric Cole of Hamburg
• Chris Winder of Evans

The following are the contents of a press release obtained from Attorney General Cuomo:

Today’s indictments are the result of a 19-month, multi-agency investigation dubbed “The City’s Finest,” which was led by the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force (OCTF) and the New York
State Police Community Narcotics Enforcement Team (C-NET), with assistance from the City of Buffalo Police Department, the Town of Hamburg Police Department, and the New York State Division of Parole.

“The drug dealers who invade our communities spread addiction and destroy lives,” said Attorney General Cuomo. “This investigation and these indictments speak to the continued infiltration of potentially deadly narcotics into western New York. By targeting ringleaders in the narcotics trade and by working cooperatively, law enforcement at all levels can continue its successes at shutting down these illicit operations.”

New York State Police Superintendent Harry J. Corbitt said, “This collaborative investigative effort, led by the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force, has resulted in a significant seizure and
the indictments of 23 individuals in this criminal operation. This sends a strong message to all those involved in trafficking narcotics that New York State will not tolerate these threats in our
communities.”

City of Buffalo Police Commissioner H. McCarthy Gipson said, “Once again we are pleased to announce that law enforcement agencies have combined their resources in ridding the streets of Buffalo and our
surrounding community of illegal narcotics activity. The suspects who have been picked up in this latest effort - dubbed “The City’s Finest” - are charged with some very serious felony crimes. The investigation - first begun by the Attorney General’s investigative team - and joined by other state and local agencies, has been successful in putting a large dent in the local drug supply line. This again illustrates not only that criminal activity knows no borders, but that members of law enforcement are prepared to combat this scourge of drug dealing.”

According to the first indictment, Nelson Medina, 31, of Los Angeles, California, was the leader of the operation. He is accused of arranging to have multiple packages containing up to18 ounces of cocaine a week shipped via UPS and Federal Express from Southern California to various addresses in the City of Buffalo, where they were received by Jacob Burkhardt, 30, of Eggert Road, Cheektowaga, who would then cut, package, and sell cocaine to others in the organization.

The additional defendants charged in the first indictment and their
alleged roles are:

Richard Cloud, 26, of Hertel Avenue in the City of Buffalo, took multiple ounces of cocaine from Burkhardt and resold it to others.

Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., 26, of Tonawanda, New York, bought multiple ounces of cocaine from Cloud and resold it to others.

Robert Carpenter, 29, and Antonio Imperi, age 25, both of Buffalo, New York, were multi-ounce cocaine customers of Mitchell and resold the cocaine to others.

Andre Parsons, 25, of Buffalo, New York; Christopher Bermel 24, Joseph Flitt, 22, and David Castle, 18, were cocaine customers of Cloud and resold the cocaine to others.

The Grand Jury charged Nelson Medina, Jacob Burkhardt, Richard Cloud, Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., Robert Carpenter, Antonio Imperi, Andre Parsons, Christopher Bermel, Jermaine Locke, Joseph Flitt, and David Castle with Conspiracy in the Second Degree (a class B felony), punishable by up to 8⅓ to 25 years in prison.

Nelson Medina, Jacob Burkhardt, Richard Cloud, Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., Robert Carpenter, and Antonio Imperi are also charged with Criminal Possession and/or Sale of a Controlled Substance in the First Degree (class A-I felonies), punishable by up to 24 years in prison.

Those charged in the second indictment and their alleged roles are:

Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., 26, of Tonawanda, regularly sold quarter ounces of cocaine to Jason Chudzik, 24, of Woodford Drive, Lakeview, New York.

William Herdman, 43, of Pinehart Road, Angola, New York, and Eric Williamson, 27, of Blasdell, New York, regularly sold cocaine to Jason Chudzik.

Kip Lewis, 46, of Burning Springs Road, Versailles, New York; Creighton Miller, 38; and Walter Edinger, 56, of Howell Street, both of Buffalo, New York, also sold cocaine to Chudzik.

The second indictment also alleges that Jason Chudzik resold cocaine to others, including:

Travis Yates, 21, of Versailles Road, Lakeview, New York; Matthew Hoak, 31, of Harvard Street, Hamburg, New York; and Michael Bannister, 29, of Nelson Avenue, Blasdell, New York. The indictment alleges Yates, Hoak and Bannister then resold that cocaine to others.

Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., Jason Chudzik, William Herdman, Creighton Miller, Eric Williamson, Kip Lewis, Michael Bannister, Matthew Hoak, Travis Yates, and Walter Edinger are all charged with Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree (a Class E felony), punishable by up to four years in prison. These defendants are also charged with Criminal Possession and Sale of a Controlled Substance in the Third Degree (a Class B felony), which is punishable by up to nine years in prison.

Eric Cole, 24, of 5029 Morgan Parkway, Hamburg, New York, and Chris Winder, 26, of 6972 Putnam Drive, Evans, New York, are charged with Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Seventh Degree, a class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail.

Those charged in the third indictment and their alleged roles are:

Julie Daniels, 27, regularly sold marijuana to Kenneth Mitchell, Jr., 26, of Tonawanda, and Garrett Kelly, 23, both of whom resold it to others.

Mitchell, Daniels, and Kelly are charged with numerous counts of Criminal Sale of Marihuana in the Second Degree (class D felony), punishable by up to 2 ½ years in prison. These defendants are also
charged with Criminal Possession of Marihuana in the Third Degree (class E felony), punishable by up to 1 ½ years in prison.

The Attorney General thanked the New York State Police, the City of Buffalo Police Department, the Town of Hamburg Police Department, and the New York State Division of Parole.

This case is being prosecuted by OCTF Assistant Deputy Attorney General Robert J. Lee, under the supervision of Executive Deputy Attorney General for Criminal Justice Robin L. Baker and OCTF First Assistant Deputy Attorney General Peri Alyse Kadanoff. The investigation was handled by Supervising Investigator Peter J. Talty, under the supervision of OCTF Chief Investigator Thomas Mullen.

This case began in June, 2007 when Trooper Matthew Stegner from Troop “T” conducted a traf
fic stop on the New York State Thruway, which resulted in the arrest of a subject for possession of Narcotics. Trooper Stegner was able to develop information from this arrest which he turned
over to CNET Western, resulting in a long term investigation into the distribution cocaine in the Buffalo area culminating with today’s arrests.

The charges against the defendants are merely accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

wow that is the whole story right there … lol

wonder if they will get drug cartel charges

hmm i wonder how much their 19month investigation cost tax payers to net $25K in yola, 200,000 in cash and a $82K in gonj?..not to mention the court costs and jailing costs of these “drug pimps”

definitely sounds like a “high priority” drug ring

Wow all that for a lousy 1.5 kilos and ~23 lbs of pot?

I’m curious in the difference in purity from Cloud to, say, Yates.

edit: seriously, 19 months for that and all they could get was a couple dudes pushin O’s?

:picard:

He is accused of arranging to have multiple packages containing up to18 ounces of cocaine a week shipped via UPS and Federal Express from Southern California to various addresses in the City of Buffalo

This has FedEx ad written all over it.

that’s right, the government needs to start doing cost/benefit analysis before investigating anyone. :roflpicard:

I’ve definitely heard a few of those names before. That’s a pretty good bust. I had no idea cocaine was such a huge problem around here.

:word:
How much did this investigation cost? If they really wanted to get it off the streets, the gov’t could have purchased all that product at full market value and probably saved 90% of the cost of this.
EDIT: 650 grams is a whole lot less than 23 lbs. That’s like 1 and a half pounds.

FYI: 2.2 LBS = 1 Kilo.

So just over 3 LBs of blow.

talk about taking down the low man on the totem pole.

what a waste.

“street value” is alot more then what you buy it for also $100(SV) ~$35 real cost

When all is said and done I wonder how much money this will end up costings the government…Cops, detectives, judges, vehicles, surveillance, jail…Seems like a complete waste of resources for the outcome…

Really?

Calling it a problem is all relative though. 23 lbs of pot is nothing. Those guys will get (if its first offense) with a slap on the wrist. The coke guys will do some time, but nothing close to 25 years.

[sarcasm]YAY FOR THE WAR ON DRUGS! THEY ARE KEEPING YOU SAFE![/sarcasm]

at least 500k … 19 months salary is going to set this back at least ~250k

I could probably find more coke at a Clarence highschool party :lol:

Yeah but it shows that they are willing to do something about it. So it could deter other people from trying the same thing. Even if it is a small bust, they can spin it to make it look huge so people think that they will be watching like crazy.

not really bro. SV = what you would pay for a small amount, so it always sounds inflated.

When you are buying in bulk, you get wholesale pricing obviously. Also, coke is cut at just about every level, those 1.5 keys are really more like .5-.75 of actual blow.

Well I meant, I didn’t know it was enough of a problem for them to go batshit crazy trying to take down 23 people over the course of however many months. Not that cocaine is running wild through the streets.

so if its cut to dimes ~$15 … so that 1.5k is SV $15,000 but they paid $2,000…

am I getting it right … (price not need be correct just trying to work the SV issue)