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BMF member arrested, Jay-Z’s ‘Death of Autotune’ gives nod to the crew

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

Is it true? Has every last Black Mafia Family member been arrested? That’s what Fox News and the AJC are reporting, citing officials at the U.S. Marshals Service in Atlanta.

But really, it depends on how you look at it.

Impressively, the Marshals have rounded up pretty much every defendant named in seven federal indictments filed in Atlanta, Orlando, Detroit, St. Louis and L.A. That comes to nearly 150 men and women who played some role in BMF’s sprawling, quarter-of-a-billion-dollar cocaine enterprise, which launched an Atlanta-based record label and was well-connected in the hip-hop world — including a tight relationship with Atlanta rap star Young Jeezy.

Most recently, Vernon “Wu” Coleman, an alleged distributor for the cocaine crew who was named in one of the Atlanta indictments, was arrested July 16. As far as I can tell, there’s only one remaining defendant nationwide who’s still listed as a fugitive: an L.A. drug dealer who allegedly supplied BMF distributors with kilos of coke in the crew’s waning days, after BMF’s founders — the brothers Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory — were jailed for running the criminal enterprise.

However, there are several suspected BMF members who, for one reason or another, were never indicted. So while it’s true that almost every BMF member who was indicted has been arrested, there are still some stragglers.

(more…)

BMF’s third-in-command sentenced

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008
Fleming Daniels

Fleming Daniels

Fleming “Ill” Daniels, a close associate of Black Mafia Family co-leader Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory, was sentenced in federal court today to 20 years in prison.

Daniels, one of 150 BMF associates indicted across the country, was convicted in June of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. He was one of the few defendants to go to trial; most of the rest pleaded guilty.

During the sentencing, U.S. District Court Judge Orinda Evans said that based on the evidence she heard, Meech and Daniels were close.

“They had connections in the music world and also the drug world,” she said. “He [Daniels] had a position of power and authority. He was Meech’s right-hand man.”

“Big Meech” Flenory, along with his brother Terry “Southwest T,” were sentenced in September to 30 years for running one of the country’s most prodigious cocaine empires. They’re estimated to have earned at least $270 million in cocaine sales.

Meech, who headed BMF’s Atlanta hub, also founded a record label and was tied to some of the South’s most celebrated rappers.

Daniels has been described as Meech’s third-in-command. He was a regular presence in Atlanta’s high-end nightclubs, where BMF members were known as legendary partiers.

In a separate case, Daniels was indicted earlier this year for the 2004 killing of Rashannibal “Prince” Drummond, who was gunned down in the parking lot of the now-defunct Velvet Room. That case has yet to be resolved.

BMF leaders canonized by Swedish artist

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Swedish artist Hannes Isaksson, whose totally awesome sketches of American gangsters have typically centered on the New York set (think Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff, Lorenzo “Fat Cat” Nichols, and Leroy “Nicky” Barnes), has broadened his horizons to the Atlanta-based Black Mafia Family.

OK, so Isaksson incorrectly identified BMF co-founder Terry “Southwest T” Flenory (left), as his brother — and fellow BMF founder — Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory (right). Still, the drawing’s pretty rad.

(Sketch by Hannes Isaksson, obviously)

Rapper, Diddy’s cousin sentenced in BMF sting

Friday, November 7th, 2008
BMF co-leader“Big Meech” Flenory (right) was like a big brother to rapper Barima “Bleu DaVinci” McKnight.

“Big Meech” Flenory (right) was like a big brother to Barima “Bleu DaVinci” McKnight.

NOTE: This post is a slightly longer version of a story that appeared in this week’s print edition of Creative Loafing.

The Black Mafia Family continued to unravel last week when a parade of the cocaine ring’s affiliates was sentenced in federal court in Atlanta. Among them were two defendants with strong ties to the hip-hop industry.

What’s more, all but one of the 10 defendants to plead guilty — Deron “D-Shock” “D-Shot” Hall — agreed to share information with the government, further shattering the once ironclad code of silence that blanketed the $270 million drug enterprise. Of the six additional defendants named in the Atlanta indictment [PDF], four are still scheduled for trial, one was convicted at trial and one remains a fugitive.

Darryl “Poppa” Taylor, the first cousin of New York-based music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, received a three-year sentence reduction for his substantial assistance in the government’s investigation into BMF, which was headed by brothers Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory. The Flenorys each received 30-year sentences in a separate case in Detroit.

In a court proceeding last year, Taylor said he was introduced to Terry Flenory by Combs’ chief of security, Paul Buford. Buford was indicted along with the Flenory brothers in 2005, but his case has not been resolved. Combs, who’s been described in court documents as a friend of the Flenorys, hasn’t been accused of any unlawful behavior related to BMF.

Taylor’s attorney, Steve Sadow, told the judge last week that Taylor — in addition to info he shared about Terry Flenory — might be able to offer the government insight into “activities going on in the Northeast.”

Had Taylor not cooperated in the investigation, he would have received a minimum of 10 years in federal prison, where there is no parole. Instead, he got just over seven years.

Barima “Bleu DaVinci” McKnight, the rapper who became the face of the Black Mafia Family’s now defunct record label, was sentenced to five years and four months. The sentence was eight months less than the government’s recommendation, due in part to him agreeing to share information with the feds — although he wasn’t willing to testify against other defendants.

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BMF’s Big Meech returns to Georgia

Monday, November 3rd, 2008
Big Meech was the Atlanta leader of the Black Mafia Family

Big Meech led BMF's Atlanta hub

After spending three years in a suburban Michigan jail, Black Mafia Family co-leader Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory is back in Georgia.

Meech and his brother, Terry “Southwest T” Flenory, were sentenced in September to 30 years in federal prison on charges that they ran a continuing criminal enterprise. BMF is estimated to have moved at least $270 million in cocaine in less than two decades. Nearly 150 defendants with ties to BMF have been indicted in seven states, including Georgia.

Meech, a flashy hip-hop entreprenuer, was prosecuted in federal court in his hometown Detroit, though he had lived in Atlanta (and, for a short while, Miami) for more than 10 years at the time of his 2005 arrest.

During a brief phone conversation Saturday, Meech said he was upbeat about starting his 30-year prison sentence. He recently was moved from the Michigan jail to one in rural Georgia, where he’s awaiting transfer to a federal prison in Jesup, Ga. He requested that particular prison so he could be close to Atlanta, where he and his crew were once a legendary presence in hip-hop clubs and on billboards that proclaimed, “The World is BMF’s.”

“I’ve got a lot of love down here,” he said.

BMF rapper Bleu DaVinci sentenced

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Barima “Bleu DaVinci” McKnight, the rapper who became the face of the Black Mafia Family, was sentenced in Atlanta federal court today for handling cash and cocaine for the drug-ring-turned-hip-hop label.

McKnight and nine other co-defendants — most notably Sean “Diddy” Combs’ cousin Darryl “Poppa” Taylor — were scheduled for sentencing today, though at least one of them will be sentenced tomorrow because proceedings ran long.

BMF’s leaders, Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory, were indicted separately in Detroit, where they birthed their organization before moving to hubs in Atlanta and L.A. Last month, the Flenory brothers were sentenced to 30 years in prison.

McKnight received a five-year sentence — eight months less than the government’s recommendation, due in part to the fact that he agreed to share information with authorities. That information was not useful, however, because the government already had built most of its case against BMF.

McKnight also was not willing to testify against other defendants.

“He would have liked to have cooperated if he could have,” his attorney, David MacKusick, said. “But he didn’t have any useful information.”

McKnight released one album, The World is BMF’s, on Big Meech’s record label. Early in his career, he performed alongside such rappers as Young Jeezy, who also has been linked to BMF. Jeezy has not been charged with a crime in relation to the cocaine crew.

A tearful McKnight addressed the court at the end of the sentencing. He said he got involved in BMF the record label as a rapper — and took a detour into BMF the cocaine ring. He also said that Big Meech, who treated him like a little brother, tried to steer him away from the cocaine trade.

“Demetirus did not show me that part of his world when I first met him,” McKnight said. “I got onto the wrong side of the track.”

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ cousin sentenced for his role in BMF

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Darryl “Poppa” Taylor was sentenced this morning in federal court to seven years in prison for his role as a cocaine courier for the Atlanta and L.A.-based Black Mafia Family.

Taylor, one of 10 co-defendants scheduled to be sentenced in Northern Georgia U.S. District Court today, received a sentence reduction for his substantial assistance in the government’s investigation into BMF, a $270 million cocaine enterprise that was headed by the brothers Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory. The Flenory brothers were charged in a separate indictment in Detroit and were sentenced last month to 30 years in federal prison.

Taylor, who moved to Atlanta from New York, is the first cousin of New York-based music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, who’s been described in court documents as a friend of the Flenorys. Combs has not been accused of any unlawful behavior related to BMF.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert McBurney said during the hearing that Taylor might be able to offer “very substantial” assistance in another federal investigation. Taylor’s attorney, Steve Sadow, told Judge Orinda Evans that Taylor could offer the government insight into “activities going on in the Northeast.”

Had Taylor not cooperated in the investigation, he would have received a minimum 10 years in federal prison, where there is no parole.

In another court proceeding last year, Taylor testified that he was introduced to Terry Flenory by Paul Buford, Combs’ chief of security. Buford and 38 other defendants were indicted along with the Flenory brothers in Detroit. There has been no resolution in Buford’s case.

BMF’s Big Meech approves biopic rights

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

That’s what we’ve been told by James DuBose, the hopeful producer of a feature film about the Atlanta and L.A.-based Black Mafia Family and its heads, the Flenory brothers. Talking to CL from Hollywood, where his production company, DuBose Entertainment, makes reality-TV shows, DuBose says he’s secured all media rights to the BMF story from the big cheese, Demetrious “Big Meech” Flenory himself.

“It’ll be his story, as told by him,” DuBose says of the film he hopes to make about Flenory and his brother, Terry Flenory. “I’m going to get the facts from the source.”

Although he doesn’t have a theatrical distribution deal at this early stage – or a script, for that matter – DuBose says he hopes to start production on a movie sometime next year with a plan to shoot at least some of the scenes on location in Atlanta. The shooting budget could be as high as $20 million, he says – small beans for a studio film, but decent money for an independent production.

DuBose says he isn’t concerned that he may end up with a movie that’s slanted toward the point of view of a convicted crime syndicate kingpin eager to rehabilitate his image. “We just want to tell the truth,” DuBose says. “We want (the movie) to be as accurate as possible.”

It already seems clear that DuBose is planning a more sympathetic portrait of Flenory than that offered by, say, federal prosecutors.

“Meech has that Robin Hood thing going on,” he says, hinting at claims that the Flenorys aided poor neighborhoods with money and gifts. “This isn’t your typical story about young black men going to jail for dealing drugs; there’s a lot of different levels here and information that hasn’t come out yet.”

DuBose, however, says he hasn’t paid Flenory to authorize the project.

Previously, DuBose has produced such TV shows as “Blind Date” and “Bad Boys of Comedy,” and has worked with broadcast and cable networks. But he says he waited for just the right project to launch his company into feature films. Apparently, BMF is it.

(Full disclosure: My colleague, Mara Shalhoup, is completing work on a book on BMF to be published next year; that book has also been optioned for a movie.)

BMF co-leaders sentenced

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory

This is an updated and more detailed account of a post that appeared on Fresh Loaf last week.

DETROIT — On Sept. 12, inside a small courtroom on the second floor of the Theodore Levine federal courthouse, an anxious crowd gathered to witness the symbolic end of the government’s two-decade investigation into the Black Mafia Family.

One of the bailiffs barked a succinct order: “No outbursts.” A moment later, a team of U.S. marshals escorted a slender man, gazing straight ahead through rimless glasses, into the courtroom.

“That’s your Uncle T,” one of the onlookers, Lucille Flenory, whispered to her grandson, sitting next to her. The bespectacled man, Lucille’s son, was hardly recognizable as he made his way to the defense table. From the time he was locked up three years ago, Terry “Southwest T” Flenory lost close to 100 pounds.

Shuffling close behind him, in a matching orange jumpsuit, was Terry’s older brother, Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory. His hair was pulled back in a ponytail, and the tattooed letters “BMF” peeked above his collar on the left side of his neck. He scanned the courtroom, turned to his supporters and flashed a wide smile.

The two men, both of whom pleaded guilty to federal drugs charges last year, rose from the down-and-out streets of Detroit to build a massive, multistate cocaine empire headquartered in Atlanta and L.A. In less than two decades, the Flenory brothers and their Black Mafia Family amassed a $270 million fortune. The drug organization relied on an estimated 500 employees. And, with Meech’s guidance, BMF helped jump-start the careers of some of Atlanta’s best-known rappers.

Read the rest of this article here.

(Photo courtesy Tammy Cowins)

BMF’s ‘Meech’ and ‘Southwest T’ get 30 years

Friday, September 12th, 2008

DETROIT — Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and his brother, Terry “Southwest T,” were sentenced in federal court today to 30 years in prison for running the $270 million cocaine empire the Black Mafia Family.

BMF, which had one of its two hubs in Atlanta, has been linked to some of the city’s more sensational crimes and some of its best-known rappers, including Young Jeezy. Jeezy was implicated in BMF’s cocaine ring during the trial earlier this year of BMF’s third-in-command. The rapper has not been charged with a crime relating to the feds’ BMF investigation.

Demetrius Flenory

Meech, 40, and Terry, 38, pleaded guilty in November 2007 to running a continuing criminal enterprise. They’ve been locked up since their charges were unsealed in Detroit three years ago.

“I don’t think ‘I’m sorry’ is the right thing to say,” Meech told the judge minutes before he was sentenced. “’I’m sorry’ is what people say when they get caught.”

The CCE charge — which is similar to a RICO, or Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations case — can carry a life sentence, though the guilty pleas all but guaranteed that the brothers would serve less time. The government was pushing for 30-year sentences, though the judge indicated in November that he might be willing to go as low as the minimum 20 years. There is no parole in the federal system.

Terry Flenory

The Flenorys are among nearly 150 BMF associates who have been indicted in seven states: Georgia, Michigan, Florida, South Carolina, Tennessee, Missouri and California. The majority of those cases have been resolved — most recently, the federal trial in Atlanta of BMF’s third-in-command, Fleming “Ill” Daniels.

Daniels and several of his co-defendants, including the rapper Barima “Bleu DaVinci” McKnight, who pleaded guilty to cocaine charges, will be sentenced later this year.

More details to come at clfreshloaf.com.

(Photos courtesy of DeKalb County jail, top, and Wayne County, Mich., jail.)

BMF leaders sentenced today

Friday, September 12th, 2008

UPDATE: Flenory brothers get hefty sentences.

Three years after they were indicted for running the massive, multi-state cocaine ring the Black Mafia Family, the brothers Demetrius “Big Meech” and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory are scheduled to be sentenced in federal court this afternoon.

Meech headed the Atlanta headquarters of the $270 million organization and was a huge presence in the city’s hip-hop scene, with ties to well-known rappers including Young Jeezy. Terry, who had a falling out with Meech several years before the indictment and began to run a separate cocaine crew, oversaw BMF’s headquarters in L.A., where thousands of kilos of cocaine were shipped in from Mexico.

The brothers birthed the organization in their hometown  Detroit, where the sentencing hearing will take place. (I’ll be there to write about it and will post an update later today.)

A year ago, Meech and Terry pleaded guilty to running a continuing criminal enterprise, which is similar to a RICO — or Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations — charge. Had they gone to trial and been convicted, they would’ve faced a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole.

By pleading guilty, the brothers could serve as little as 20 years. The government is pushing for 30.