One member and two associates of the Wildboys gang were
sentenced today in federal court in Charleston, South Carolina, after each
pleaded guilty to attempted murder in aid of racketeering for their roles in
retaliation attacks against a rival gang.
The announcement was made by Acting Assistant Attorney
General Kenneth A. Blanco of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division,
Special Agent in Charge C.J. Hyman of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives (ATF) Charlotte, North Carolina Field Division; Solicitor Duffie
Stone of the 14th Judicial Circuit; Solicitor David Pascoe of the First
Circuit; Sheriff R.A. Strickland of the Colleton County, South Carolina
Sheriff’s Office; Chief Wade Marvin of the Walterboro, South Carolina Police
Department; Sheriff Al Cannon, Jr. of the Charleston County, South Carolina
Sheriff’s Office; Sheriff L. C. Knight of the Dorchester County, South Carolina
Sheriff’s Office; Chief Jon Rogers of the Summerville, South Carolina Police
Department; Director Jerry B. Adger of the South Carolina Department of
Probation, Parole and Pardon Services; and Chief Mark Keel of the South
Carolina Law Enforcement Division.
U.S. District Court Judge Richard M. Gergel sentenced Brian
Manigo, aka “B-Nasty,” of Green Pond, South Carolina, to 10 years in prison;
Damien Robinson, aka “Sacked Up,” also of Green Pond, South Carolina, to 10
years in prison; and Kelvin Mitchell, aka “Kevy Boy,”of Ruffin, South Carolina,
to 39 months in prison, after each pleaded guilty to attempted murder in aid of
racketeering.
According to court documents, all three defendants were
members or associates of the Wildboys gang, a violent street gang that
originated in the Green Pond area of Walterboro, South Carolina. From 2009 to
2015, Wildboys gang members used Facebook and YouTube to communicate with each
other; threaten rival gang members and the police; flaunt gang colors, tattoos,
and hand signs; and post photographs and videos depicting firearms, large
amounts of cash, and what purported to be controlled substances. Gang members also engaged in violent criminal
activities, including robberies of convenience stores, attempted murders of
rival gang members, and narcotics trafficking. The Wildboys gang was also, for
a time, aligned with another violent street gang called the “Cowboys” that
originated out of the Brittlebank, or Eastside, area of Walterboro, South
Carolina. In addition to sharing a common interest in posting threats and
photographs depicting firearms, large amounts of cash, and what purported to be
narcotics on Facebook and YouTube, the Wildboys and the Cowboys gangs shared common
enemies. These shared interests resulted in shootings aimed at rival gang
members, which left innocent by-standers seriously injured.
Manigo and Mitchell were sentenced for their roles in a May
14, 2011, retaliation shooting aimed at a rival gang member. While Mitchell
drove the vehicle, Manigo retrieved an AK-47 rifle from the trunk of the car
and fired multiple shots at the gang member who was standing in a crowd of
individuals. An innocent by-stander sustained serious bodily injury as a result
of the shooting.
Robinson was sentenced for his role in the April 7, 2015,
retaliation drive-by shooting aimed at members of a rival gang. Robinson was
the driver of the vehicle containing two other members of the Wildboys gang. As
Robinson drove past the residence of the known rival gang members, the two
passengers fired multiple shots at the home using an AR-15 and an SKS rifle.
Robinson gave the AR-15, which belonged to him, to his fellow gang member to
use during the shooting. The shooting resulted in serious bodily injury to an
innocent victim inside the residence.
As part of the sentence, Manigo, Mitchell and Robinson were
ordered to serve a term of three years of supervised release and to pay the
costs of medical care for the victims.
A fourth member of the Wildboys, Joshua Manigault, who
pleaded guilty to the April 7, 2015, shooting, has yet to be sentenced.
Devin Brown, who was also charged in the indictment, is
scheduled for a jury trial to begin on June 26.
The charges against Brown contained in the indictment are merely
accusations, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
The case was investigated by the ATF in Charleston, South
Carolina, in partnership with the Walterboro Police Department; Colleton County
Sheriff’s Office; Charleston County Sheriff’s Office; Dorchester County
Sheriff’s Office; Summerville Police Department; Fourteenth Judicial Circuit Solicitor’s
Office; First Judicial Circuit Solicitor’s Office; South Carolina Department of
Probation, Parole and Pardon Services; and the South Carolina Law Enforcement
Division.
The case was prosecuted by Trial Attorney Leshia Lee-Dixon
of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section and Tameaka A.
Legette, Special Assistant U.S. Attorney from the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit
Solicitor’s Office, Bluffton, South Carolina.
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