A member of the Aryan Brotherhood of Mississippi (ABM) gang
was sentenced to life in prison for his participation in a variety of violent
criminal acts, including racketeering conspiracy, murder, kidnapping,
methamphetamine production and trafficking and other related offenses.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Felicia C. Adams of the Northern
District of Mississippi, Special Agent in Charge Stephen G. Azzam of the Drug
Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) New Orleans Field Office, Special Agent in
Charge Constance Hester of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Fire and Explosives
(ATF) New Orleans Field Office, Special Agent in Charge Donald Alway of the FBI
in Mississippi and Director John Dowdy of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics
(MBN) made the announcement.
“Criminal enterprises like the ABM hold communities hostage
with fear and violence, but they can be hard to prosecute because they stretch
across jurisdictions,” said Assistant Attorney General Caldwell. “This case demonstrates our commitment to
targeting the leadership and structure of these gangs, building on the
successful racketeering prosecutions of the AB in Texas, Oklahoma and now
Mississippi. We will not stop until
these gangs are dismantled and their members are behind bars.”
“This prosecution is the result of an unprecedented
collaboration between the Department of Justice, federal, state and local law
enforcement officers targeting a large-scale prison gang involved in violent
organized crime throughout the state of Mississippi,” said U.S. Attorney
Adams. “As a result of this
collaborative effort, we have effectively dismantled this violent organization
and sent a clear message that the United States Attorney’s Office and our law
enforcement partners have an unwavering commitment to hold those individuals
accountable who insist on creating an atmosphere of violence and fear in our
communities.”
“Our neighborhoods deserve to exist without fear and
intimidation inflicted by violent drug gangs like the Aryan Brotherhood of
Mississippi,” said Special Agent in Charge Azzam. “The sentencing of this gang member should be
a warning to others who prey on the weak and defenseless through their drug
trafficking and violent acts. We will
continue to work with all of our law enforcement partners, to relentlessly
pursue these violent criminals and drug traffickers plaguing our communities.”
“The substantial sentence imposed today sends a strong
message to the defendant and to other violent gangs that they will be held
accountable for their criminal activities,” said Special Agent in Charge
Hester. “ATF will utilize every
available resource to combat violent crime.
We will continue to collaborate with all of our federal, state and local
law enforcement partners in identifying, disrupting and dismantling the violent
gangs that prey on our local communities.”
“The convictions in these cases reflect a major disruption
of a large organization that incubates in our prison systems and spills over to
our streets," said Special Agent in Charge Donald Alway. “Recognizing and neutralizing these
organizations is vitally important, and thanks to the joint efforts of our
local, state and federal law enforcement partners, Mississippi is much safer.”
“This verdict and case conclusion is another example of the
outstanding teamwork in Mississippi among federal, state and local law
enforcement,” said Director Dowdy. “The
dismantling of this organization represents the continuing commitment in law
enforcement to protecting the public safety of all Mississippians.”
Frank George Owens Jr., 44, aka State Raised, of
D’Iberville, Mississippi, a member of ABM, was sentenced yesterday to serve an
additional 120 months for attempted murder by U.S. District Judge Glen H.
Davidson of the Northern District of Mississippi. On April 13, 2016, Owens was found guilty by
a federal grand jury of engaging in a racketeering conspiracy, murder,
kidnapping and attempted murder.
The ABM is the Mississippi-centered branch of the Aryan
Brotherhood, a violent, “whites only,” prison-based gang with members and
associates operating inside and outside of state penal institutions. The ABM is engaged in racketeering
activities, including murder, attempted murder, kidnapping, assault, money
laundering, firearms trafficking and trafficking in marijuana and
methamphetamine, both inside and outside correctional facilities. According to trial evidence, Owens and three
co-defendants served at varying times on the ABM’s three-member “wheel” that
oversaw and directed ABM activity throughout Mississippi during the conspiracy.
According to evidence presented at trial, Owens and other
ABM leaders ordered others to lure an individual to an ABM house so that they
could murder him for an unpaid drug debt.
Owens and Eric Glenn Parker beat the victim to death and delivered the
body to a co-defendant, who burned the victim’s body for days in order to
incinerate it. In addition, in a
separate incident, Owens ordered the stabbing of a gang member for threatening
to rape a child. The gang member was
stabbed five times.
Today’s sentencing marks the culmination of a 2.5-year
investigation into and prosecution of ABM, which resulted in the conviction of
42 members and associates of the gang.
Parker, 35, of Richton, Mississippi, was convicted along with Owens of
engaging in a racketeering conspiracy, murder and conspiracy to possess with
intent to distribute at least 500 grams of methamphetamine. Parker’s sentencing has not yet been
scheduled.
The DEA, ATF, FBI and the MBN investigated the case. The U.S. Marshals Service; Federal Protective
Service; U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security
Investigations; Mississippi Highway Patrol; Mississippi Bureau of Investigation;
Mississippi Department of Corrections; Harrison County, Mississippi, Sheriff’s
Office; South Mississippi Metro Enforcement Team; Tupelo, Mississippi, Police
Department; North Mississippi Narcotics Unit; Tishomingo County, Mississippi,
Sheriff’s Office; Lee County, Mississippi, Sheriff’s Office; Forrest County,
Mississippi, District Attorney’s Office; Prentiss County, Mississippi,
Sheriff’s Office; Jones County, Mississippi, Sheriff’s Office; Harrison County,
Mississippi, Sheriff’s Office; and South Mississippi Metro Enforcement Team provided
valuable assistance in the investigation.
The Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section and the U.S.
Attorney’s Offices of the Northern and Southern Districts of Mississippi
prosecuted the case.
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