Jury heard about triple murder in nightclub, murder of
witness, 50 pounds of cocaine, and shooting of teenager
ATLANTA – Three leaders of the Gangster Disciples national
criminal organization have been convicted by a federal jury of offenses
including racketeering conspiracy involving murder, attempted murder in aid of
racketeering, drug trafficking conspiracy, and other crimes. This case is the latest of a series of trials
and pleas for members and leaders of the Gangster Disciples.
“The Gangster Disciples are extremely organized and their
reach is wide-spread across the United States,” said U.S. Attorney Byung “BJay”
Pak. “Their strict chain of command that
carried their message of violence and crime throughout the organization posed a
serious threat nationwide. They lured
young people into the gang with the promise of a better life, and then inducted
them into an appalling world of violence and crime.”
"The Gangster Disciples have terrorized communities in
Georgia and elsewhere for far too long,” said Assistant Attorney Brian A.
Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Today’s convictions, as well as the
convictions of 32 co-defendants to date, send a clear message: the Department
of Justice is committed to dismantling this violent and lawless criminal
enterprise.”
“Drug trafficking, thefts, violent assaults and murders are
all crimes that the Gangster Disciples commit every day to protect their turf,
increase their territory, control and recruit members and terrorize rival
gangs. They are merciless and have
wreaked havoc in our neighborhoods for far too long,” said Special Agent in
Charge Chris Hacker of the FBI’s Atlanta Field Office. “The FBI and our partners will aggressively
pursue gangs wherever they surface. We are dedicated to dismantling these
organized and violent criminal enterprises in order to make Atlanta and the
surrounding communities, a safer place for our citizens.”
According to U.S. Attorney Pak, the charges, and other
information presented in court: The
Gangster Disciples are a national gang with roots in Chicago dating back to the
1970’s. The gang is highly structured,
with a hierarchy of leadership posts known as “Positions of Authority” or
“POAs.” The gang strictly enforces rules
for its members, the most important of which is “silence and secrecy” – a
prohibition on cooperating with law enforcement. Violations of the rule are punishable by
death.
The evidence showed that the defendants and their fellow
gang members used the gang’s structure to carry out a pattern of violent and
serious crimes, including murder, attempted murder, robbery, bank and wire
fraud, drug trafficking, and extortion.
The jury heard testimony and other evidence about multiple murders and
attempted murders by Gangster Disciples.
Included in those murders was a deadly shooting at a
nightclub in Macon, Georgia. Three
people were killed and another three were wounded after gang member Vertuies
Wall and his subordinates started a gunfight with rivals. On another occasion, gang member Lewis Mobley
shot a teenage victim twice at point-blank range. Mobley believed that the
victim had disrespected the gang by walking through a crowd while shouting a
slogan and wearing the color associated with a rival gang. In a third incident, a top Gangster Disciples
leader summoned the gang’s National Chief Enforcer to travel across the country
to kill a witness. The witness, who was
scheduled to testify against a Gangster Disciple on drug charges, was shot dead
in her home on the gang’s orders.
The evidence also showed that each of the trial defendants
held a position of authority within the gang’s structure. Mobley held a position in the gang’s
security/enforcement arm, and exercised leadership over the enforcement team
known as “HATE Committee,” that was responsible for committing murders,
shootings, and other violence. Wall was
the “First C,” or local leader, for the Macon area Gangster Disciples. Gang member Lawrence Grice also held a
leadership position over Gangster Disciples in parts of Texas including the
city of Houston.
The defendants listed below were convicted in this case, and
found guilty of the following charges:
Lewis Mobley, 42,
of Atlanta, Georgia, was convicted of RICO conspiracy, including murder and
drug conspiracy; committing an attempted murder in aid of racketeering and
using a firearm to do so; and possessing with intent to distribute cocaine and
possessing a firearm relating to the drug crime.
Vertuies Wall, 43,
of Atlanta, Georgia, was convicted of RICO conspiracy, including murder.
Lawrence Grice,
30, of Houston, Texas, was convicted of RICO conspiracy, and a drug conspiracy
regarding more than five kilograms of cocaine.
To date, 27 defendants have pleaded guilty, five were
convicted at a separate trial, and three defendants are presently awaiting
trial.
The FBI Safe Streets Task Force; ATF; U.S. Marshal Service;
The U.S. Postal Service, the Bureau of Prisons; the Georgia Department of
Community Supervision; the Georgia Department of Corrections; DeKalb Police
Department; Cobb County Police Department; Bibb County District Attorney’s
Office; Atlanta Police Department; Louisiana State Police; and Aurora, Colorado
Police Department investigated this case.
Assistant U.S Attorneys Kim S. Dammers, Chief of the
Organized Crime and Gangs Section, Ryan K. Buchanan, Deputy Chief of the
Violent Crime and National Security Section, and Erin N. Spritzer of the
Northern District of Georgia, and Department of Justice Trial Attorney Conor
Mulroe of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section prosecuted
the case.
For further information please contact the U.S. Attorney’s
Public Affairs Office at USAGAN.PressEmails@usdoj.gov or (404) 581-6016. The Internet address for the U.S. Attorney’s
Office for the Northern District of Georgia is
http://www.justice.gov/usao-ndga.
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