Pubdate: Fri, 08 Jun 2001
Source: Augusta Chronicle, The (GA)
Copyright: 2001 The Augusta Chronicle
Contact:  http://www.augustachronicle.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/31
Note: Does not publishing letters from outside of the immediate Georgia and 
South Carolina circulation area
Author: Margaret N O'Shea

INDICTMENT LINKS INMATES TO DRUG SCHEME

18 Charged With Conspiracy To Launder Money Made By Selling Smuggled-In 
Narcotics, Running Sports Betting Ring

Inmates at the federal prison in Edgefield have been operating drug and 
illegal sports-gambling rings with the help of friends and relatives on the 
outside, according to a grand jury indictment opened Thursday. The 15-count 
indictment handed down in May was left sealed until most of the suspects 
were arrested, U.S. Attorney Scott N. Schools said.

Six inmates allegedly were involved in the arranging of shipments of heroin 
from Puerto Rico and cocaine and marijuana from other sources, the 
indictment charged.

Authorities say the drugs went to friends and relatives outside the prison 
and were ultimately transferred to female couriers fraudulently listed as 
legitimate visitors to the inmates. The women allegedly smuggled the drugs 
into the prison.

The drugs, transferred during visits, were sold inside the prison.

At least three of the same inmates also ran a sports betting operation, the 
indictment said. In all, 18 people were charged with conspiracy to launder 
the money made by the crime rings. Among them were one inmate's parents - 
the mother accused of running drugs for her son and the father accused of 
providing him betting lines and odds.

More arrests are expected before the investigation is over, Mr. Schools said.

The inmates charged are Jorge Gonzalez-Vasquez, Roberto Medina, David 
Crews, Roger Coleman, Thurman Ford and Raymond Clay.

The U.S. attorney said Daniel Gonzalez-Vasquez and Juan Carlos Rodriguez 
are accused of supplying Puerto Rico native Jorge Gonzalez-Vasquez with 
heroin from the island.

He said Mr. Crews, who authorities allege ran the gambling ring, is from 
Winston-Salem, N.C., where his parents live. Jerry and Betty Crews also 
face criminal charges in connection with the alleged illegal businesses. 
The indictment says Desmond Cunningham, of Columbia, received heroin from 
Mrs. Crews and gave it to Tameika Gordon, Bevelyn Moorer and Linda Reed, 
who also are from Columbia, to take to David Crews.

North Carolinians Kristin Shamel, Carol Rothrock, Randall Shumaker and 
Betty Glass also are named in the indictment as playing unspecified roles.

The inmates will be arraigned June 21 in federal court. Other defendants 
have already made initial appearances before federal magistrates in 
Columbia, Winston-Salem, and Puerto Rico except for Mr. Cunningham, who is 
expected to appear in court today. Mr. Schools said more details about the 
prison case and a related crack and cocaine ring in Columbia will emerge at 
Mr. Cunningham's detention hearing.

If convicted, the defendants face a maximum of 40 years in prison and fines 
as high as $2 million. With 15 charges in all, that could mean hefty 
sentences for those named in multiple counts.

The alleged inside crimes were investigated by the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation; the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigations 
Division; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; Richland County 
Sheriff's Department; South Carolina National Guard; Columbia Police 
Department; and U.S. Bureau of Prisons, all of which worked together on the 
Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force.

The disclosure of possible crime rings came after another serious incident 
at the Edgefield prison in late May, when an inmate fatally stabbed another 
with a makeshift ice pick, eyewitnesses said.

Ronnie Bazel Jr., 25, of Athens, Tenn., who was serving a 10-year sentence 
for conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine base, was pronounced dead 
at Edgefield County Hospital less than an hour after he was stabbed in the 
chest.

Willie Earl Clark, 53, of Chicago, serving 25 years for possessing a 
firearm despite a felony record, surrendered his weapon to prison staff 
after the stabbing, prison officials said. He is in the Special Housing 
Unit while the FBI and corrections staff continue their investigation.

Prison spokesman Mike Smith said Thursday that no formal charges have been 
filed in the May 28 stabbing and that no motive has been determined.