Feds bust brazen gang that peddled deadly fentanyl in open-air drug market at NYC public housing complex

A dozen hooligans with lengthy rap sheets terrorized an East Harlem NYCHA complex for three years, brazenly hawking deadly drugs such as fentanyl and the even-more-powerful nitazene in plain view, federal authorities alleged Wednesday.The feds busted the open-air drug market in the James Weldon Johnson Houses, arresting eight of the alleged pushers — part of a broader effort by the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office to target crime in city housing projects.“The conduct of this 12-man crew created an environment of fear for many of the Johnson House residents,” said Jay Clayton, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, in a news conference hours after the busts.Clayton said the federal charges likely will keep the accused dealers off the streets longer than if the case was pursued by city and state authorities – a sly backhand at New York’s criminal justice system.“If our federal charges are proven, this crew should be off the streets for a long time,” he said.The crew — including three suspects who remained on the loose and one already in prison — all face drug conspiracy and firearms charges in a federal indictment, federal prosecutors said.The charges followed an extensive undercover sting by the NYPD that caught roughly 45 deals of crack, fentanyl and other narcotics on video, according to court documents.The alleged dealers with street names such as “Skii Dotty” and “Baby Wuu” used the NYCHA project’s lobby as their home base, but spread their deals across the complex — even into a children’s playground, court papers allege.The crew sold cocaine, crack, heroin and fentanyl — with hints their wares verged into increasingly dangerous drugs, according to court documents.One suspect, Caesar Hernandez, 34, twice sold drugs that turned out to be a nitazene — a group synthetic opioids up to 43 times more powerful than fentanyl, the feds alleged.Many suspects already had long criminal records, including 19-year-old Jaffar...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles