MARYLAND
EXILE PROSECUTORS CHARGE 19 PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
DEFENDANTS IN NEW INITIATIVE TO DETER SALE AND POSSESSION OF ILLEGAL
GUNS
Federal
Effort Includes Prosecutions of 15 Defendants In Past Two Days
Greenbelt,
Maryland - As part of an enhanced federal effort to stem gun violence
in Prince George's County, federal criminal complaints and indictments
were filed charging 15 defendants with firearms violations in the past
two days, announced United States Attorney for the District of Maryland
Rod J. Rosenstein. Four additional defendants were charged in federal
court as part of the initiative over the past two weeks. The cases,
investigated by agents implementing the new "Operation Gunrunner"
program and working with the Regional Anti-Gang Enforcement (RAGE) task
force, are being prosecuted in federal court as part of a joint effort
by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to deter illicit
firearms trafficking in Prince George's County.
U.S.
Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein said, "As part of the Maryland Exile
program, federal prosecutors based in Greenbelt charged 57 defendants
with federal firearms violations in 2006, which was a 27% increase over
the previous year. In 2007, we already have charged 46 defendants with
federal firearms violations. The unprecedented increase in prosecutions
this year is attributable to our 'Operation Gunrunner' initiative to
prosecute people who supply guns to criminals, and to exceptional work
by the ATF RAGE task force to catch illegal gun suppliers and keep guns
out of the hands of criminals. These defendants all face lengthy sentences
in federal prisons far from home, with no probation and no parole."
Maryland
EXILE is a joint effort by local, state, and federal law enforcement
agencies to combat gun crime that combines law enforcement efforts,
community action and revitalization, and public awareness. The motto
of Maryland EXILE is that criminals should do "hard time for gun
crime."
Special
Agent in Charge Gregory K. Gant stated, "These indictments and
arrests demonstrate ATF's commitment to aggressively fight violent crime,
by stopping the illegal flow of guns and drugs into our communities.
Through collaborative efforts like Exile, Gunrunner, and the RAGE Task
Force we are determined to increase the quality of life of our law abiding
citizens
who deserve to live free from fear of gangs and violence.
Defendants
charged under the initiative include:
Timothy
Stanley Johnson, age 52, of Glenarden, Maryland, is charged by complaint
with being a felon in possession and theft of a firearm which has moved
in interstate commerce. Court documents allege that during his employment
with a moving and storage company in March 2007, Johnson handled the
shipment of property of an active duty member of the Kansas Air National
Guard who was assigned to the Pentagon. Included in the property shipped
from Kansas to the Washington, D.C. area were a Remington 870 shotgun,
a Taurus .357 caliber revolver and a U.S. Arms-AIG .22 semiautomatic
rifle. Johnson is alleged to have stolen the firearms in April 2007
and sold the revolver and shotgun to a heroin dealer. Agents seized
the rifle from his residence on May 11, 2007.
Alexander
Rose, age 47; Carlos Enrique Segura, age 21; Jeremy Boyd Scales, age
20; Antoine Rashad Thomas, age 21; and Gerald Anthony Thomas, Jr., age
43, all of Hyattsville, Maryland, are charged by complaint with unlawfully
dealing in firearms in connection with their sale of 11 firearms to
an ATF informant from January to May 2007. The transactions took place
in or near an apartment in Prince George's County. Gerald Thomas and
Scales are also charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm.
Gerald Thomas and Rose are also charged with unlawful possession of
an unregistered firearm.
Charges
arising from the sale of two firearms and ammunition, as well as numerous
sales of crack cocaine, to the ATF informant are filed by complaint
against Tammy Lynn Alger, age 40, of Hyattsville; Edwin Francisco Alvanez,
age 20, of Adelphi, Maryland; and Luis Alfredo Gonzales, age 21, of
Beltsville, Maryland. The transactions are alleged to have taken place
from November 2006 to May 2007. Alger has been charged by separate complaint
with being a "straw purchaser," meaning that she unlawfully
purchased ammunition for a convicted felon.
Benjamin
A. Morgan, age 26, of Landover, Maryland, is charged by complaint with
being a felon in possession of a firearm and unlawful possession of
an unregistered firearm after he allegedly threatened to shoot and kill
several employees in the lobby of the Potomac Ridge Behavioral Health
Center in Rockville, Maryland on May 25, 2007. According to court documents,
Morgan told police who arrived at the scene that he wanted to go home
and retrieve two shotguns and two handguns to kill people. Agents seized
a short barreled Remington Arms 12 gauge shotgun from his residence
and an F.I.E. Titan .25 caliber semi-automatic handgun from his vehicle.
On
Monday, Patrick Keith Hughes, age 38, of District Heights, was charged
in federal court by criminal complaint with being a felon in possession
of a firearm and possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine;
Darrell Sellers, age 31, of Ft. Washington, Maryland was indicted for
possession of a firearm by a convicted felon; and a criminal complaint
was also filed charging Kevin Darnell Anderson, age 34, of Capitol Heights,
Maryland with being a felon in possession of ammunition. A sealed indictment
was also returned charging two defendants with firearms violations.
Indictments
were returned within the past two weeks charging Cedric Cameron Clark,
age 24, of Capitol Heights and Robert Marbury, age 38, of Temple Hills,
Maryland with being a felon in possession of a firearm and a sealed
indictment was returned charging an additional defendant with firearms
violations. Charges were filed on July 2, 2007 alleging that James Smith
illegally possessed a firearm on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.
Charges
against three additional defendants remain under seal.
In
addition to the new charges filed against 19 defendants, Alonzo Javon
Nichols, age 31, of Ft. Washington, and Joel Santiago, age 20 of Laurel,
Maryland pleaded guilty to the charge of felon in possession of a firearm
on July 6 and July 9, 2007, respectively.
The
maximum federal prison sentences for the charges filed this week include
5 years for unlawfully dealing in firearms; 10 years for possession
of a firearm by a felon; 10 years for theft of a firearm which has moved
in interstate commerce; 10 years for unlawful possession of an unregistered
firearm; 20 years for possession with intent to distribute cocaine and/or
heroin; and life in prison for possession of a firearm in furtherance
of a drug crime. The defendants also face large fines.
An
indictment or a criminal complaint is not a finding of guilt. An individual
charged by indictment or criminal complaint is presumed innocent unless
and until proven guilty at some later criminal proceedings.
United
States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein commended the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives and its RAGE Task Force, which includes the
Prince George's County Police Department, the Maryland National Capital
Park Police, the Howard County Police Department, the Montgomery County
Police Department, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Maryland
State Police and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement; as well as
the United States Park Police for the investigative work performed in
these cases. Mr. Rosenstein thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys James Trusty,
Stacy Dawson Belf, David Salem, Michele Sartori, Gina L. Simms, Barbara
S. Skalla, Jonathan Su and Hollis Weisman, who are prosecuting the various
cases. U.S. Attorney Rosenstein also thanked Prince George's County
State's Attorney Glen F. Ivey for the assistance provided by his office.