• DC gang kingpin gets 13 years for crimes that include using COVID relie

    From P. Coonan@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 24 22:05:54 2025
    XPost: dc.politics, alt.politics.immigration, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.politics.democrats

    The leader of a notorious Washington, D.C., gang has been sentenced to 13
    years in prison for an operation that included smuggling drugs on planes
    and using COVID relief money to buy drugs that members then peddled on
    city streets.

    Kenneth Amedola Olugbenga, the leader of the Kennedy Street Crew, was officially sentenced on April 17 on charges including conspiracy to
    distribute 500 grams or more of cocaine and possessing a firearm in
    furtherance of a drug-trafficking offense, according to the Justice
    Department.

    The 29-year-old Olugbenga, by his own admission an organizer and leader of
    the gang, took nearly six dozen round-trip flights to the West Coast to
    get drugs to sell in so-called "open-air" drug markets.

    He also created a fake business to apply for and receive forgivable Small Business Administration loans during the COVID-19 pandemic. He then used
    the funds to buy more bulk narcotics, federal prosecutors also said.

    Olugbenga served as the lead money-launderer for the gang, or crew, which included him establishing phony companies like a phony car wash to
    "project an illusion of legitimacy for the crew’s drug trafficking" and a casino to launder $1.8 million in illegal proceeds from drug trafficking.

    He was the last of 17 members of the gang to be convicted in the federal
    case that included help from the FBI, IRS and D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department. Their charges also included the sale of fentanyl.

    "Put simply, the KDY Crew is a driver of the cycle of violence associated
    with drug trafficking and firearms that has plagued the Kennedy Street neighborhood for years," Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew W. Kinskey wrote
    in a court memorandum ahead of Olugbenga’s sentencing.

    Olugbenga’s attorney, Stephen F. Brennwald, minimized his client's role as
    a gang leader, describing the gang's meetings as gatherings of friends who freelanced.

    https://justthenews.com/government/local/leader-dc-gang-used-covid-19- loans-buy-drugs-sentenced-13-years

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