Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jul 2003 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2003 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Herb Frazier and Glenn Smith 13 INDICTED IN CHARLESTON-AREA DESIGNER DRUG RING Grand jury charges group with selling nearly $1 million worth of Ecstasy and other popular party drugs A federal grand jury has indicted 13 people, mostly Charleston-area residents, on charges they conspired to sell Ecstasy and other drugs in what investigators on Thursday called the largest designer drug operation in Charleston's history. A seven-month investigation by federal agents and Charleston County deputies, dubbed "Fallen Angels," uncovered a multidrug network that sold nearly $1 million worth of drugs shipped to the area from New York City and Miami. The suspects, all in their 20s, come from across the Charleston area, from the gated community of Wild Dunes on Isle of Palms and upscale Mount Pleasant apartments to Ladson and Summerville. The indictment alleges that the suspects sold Ecstasy, ketamine, the pill GHB, powder cocaine and "purple haze" marijuana, a highly potent marijuana that sells for $6,500 per pound. Ecstasy, ketamine and GHB are commonly referred to as designer drugs, which are derived by altering an existing drug to produce a desired effect. They're often used at rave parties and young adult nightclubs. Within the drug ring, the suspects had positions as suppliers, gun runners, enforcers and drug processors, investigators said. Young women served as couriers, taking drugs, guns and money in vacuum-sealed packages stored in the door panels of high-end rental cars, officials said. Charleston County sheriff's Sgt. David Robertson, a narcotics investigator, said designer drugs have gained in popularity in the Lowcountry in the past two years, primarily among high school-college-aged people. Though statistics were not available Thursday, Robertson said deputies have noticed a marked increase in designer drug arrests and seizures. "Three years ago, I never heard of Ecstasy," he said. "Now it's getting more popular every day." All but one of the 13 suspects, who were arrested earlier this week, have been released on bail, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Alston Badger. Angel Luis Rodriguez, 27, of New York City, who is suspected to be the ringleader of the 2-1/2-year-old operation, was arrested in Charleston earlier this year. He remains in custody because he is considered the greatest flight risk, Badger said. After Rodriguez's arrest, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration adopted the investigation from the sheriff's office. "It began with Charleston County's metro guys making an Ecstasy arrest, and it led to their sources," Badger said. In addition to Rodriguez, the 11-count indictment names: Michael Joseph Grasso, 29, and Rachel Parks, 23, both of Mount Pleasant; Douglas Andrew Ladson, 23, Robert Stephen Ryder, 23, and Jason Youmans, 26, all of Charleston; George David Carr, 30, and Ronald Gray, 26, both of Summerville; Mark Moore, 26, of Myrtle Beach; Daniel Cavey, 29, of Isle of Palms; Larry Caulder, 28, of Ladson; Shawn Kevin Droze, 23, of Moncks Corner; and Thomas Harkleroad, 24, of Goose Creek. If convicted, the suspects would face maximum fines of $4 million each and 10 years in prison. All have pleaded not guilty, according to court documents. Charleston attorney Peter Shahid, who represents Droze, said he will file a motion asking the government to release its evidence against his client, who is accused of cocaine sales. Droze was released to the custody of his sister, Shahid said. Authorities said the drug ring has operated since November 2001 and has coordinated the distribution of drugs between Florida and New York. Once in Charleston, they would be processed and packaged for distribution at local nightclubs and parties. To help conceal the drugs inside cars, the packages contained dryer sheets to mask their scent in the event of a search by a police dog, authorities said. Investigators estimate that the drug operation netted several hundred thousand dollars in profits from local sales, according to a DEA synopsis of the case. The suspects reportedly conspired to distribute thousands of Ecstasy pills, hundreds of ketamine vials, hundreds of pounds of high-potency marijuana, multiple kilos of cocaine and an undetermined amount of GHB, the report states. Rodriguez acted as a leader and supplier whose role was to acquire Ecstasy, cocaine and marijuana, authorities said, adding that he also was called on to pressure people who didn't pay for drugs they had received. Ladson, Grasso and Parks were quasi-partners in the operation and would split profits with Rodriguez, the DEA report states. In February, sheriff's detectives arrested Rodriguez after seizing an undisclosed amount of marijuana, 1,282 grams of cocaine and 1,110 Ecstasy pills from his apartment on William Kennerty Drive in West Ashley, according to an arrest affidavit. Rodriguez initially gave deputies a Florida driver's license with a false name, the affidavit states. The same month, sheriff's detectives arrested Youmans on Ecstasy trafficking charges. Deputies arrested Parks, a mother and registered nurse, on a similar charge when she showed up at Youmans' bail hearing. Sheriff's detectives searched Parks' Mount Pleasant home and found ledgers that listed numbers, profits and initials of customers, according to an affidavit. The next week, deputies charged Parks with trafficking cocaine after finding more than a kilo of the drug at her Cambridge Lakes Drive home. At the time, sheriff's Lt. John Clark said Parks was one of seven people linked to a far-reaching drug operation. Designer drugs generally are produced in clandestine labs, often in Europe, and shipped into smaller cities such as Charleston from larger urban areas such as Miami and New York City, authorities said. Though the drugs move through an underground network, their presence has not gone unnoticed. In June 2001, 16 people, including a 16-year-old, were charged with possession and distribution of Ecstasy, GHB and other drugs at a weekend rave party at the Exchange Park in Ladson that attracted 1,500 people to a "supermarket of drugs," deputies said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh