Pubdate: Tue, 24 Feb 2004 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2004, The Detroit News Contact: http://detnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126 Author: David Shepardson,The Detroit News FEDS BUST METRO DRUG RING 40 Tons of Marijuana Are Sold Over 13 Years; Largest Conspiracy Indictment in Metro History GROSSE POINTE PARK -- A federal indictment made public Monday charged 20 people from six states with being part of a multimillion-dollar drug ring that sold 40 tons of marijuana since 1991. U.S. Attorney Jeffrey G. Collins called the case the single largest drug conspiracy indictment in eastern Michigan history. Ten of the defendants are from Detroit suburbs: Grosse Pointe Park, Birmingham, Chesterfield Township, Sterling Heights, Livonia, Grosse Pointe Woods, Royal Oak, Harper Woods, St. Clair Shores and Harrison Township. Others are from Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada and New Jersey. The group allegedly moved large amounts of Mexican marijuana in moving vans through Arizona and California. Initially, the ring shipped 2-4 pounds in cars and later moved as much as 4,000 pounds per shipment in moving vans dispatched from Arizona, the government said. Much was shipped to a residence and business owned by Grosse Pointe Park resident John Brosnan, 46, the government said. Collins identified Brosnan as an organizer of the group; in March, federal agents seized 3,700 pounds of marijuana at his home, officials said. Brosnan is free on $50,000 unsecured bond. The Drug Enforcement Administration's investigation began in February 2002 after defendant Thomas Nix of St. Pete Beach, Fla. -- an alleged courier for defendant George David Thomas, 43, of Birmingham -- was stopped by state police in Iowa in a car registered to Thomas. Police found $244,000 in cash in the car and learned Nix was on his way to Las Vegas, where he was to meet with members of the drug ring and pay for a marijuana shipment, the indictment said. John Gilbride, special agent in charge of the Detroit DEA, said law enforcement agencies are committed to confiscating the profits of drug dealers. Seven of the defendants are charged with conspiracy to obstruct a criminal investigation by bribery. In March 2003, the first of the 20 individuals was indicted. One of those, John O'Donnell, is an attorney in Los Angeles. He allegedly drove at least one shipment of marijuana to Detroit from Tucson. O'Donnell paid defendant Jennifer Myers' attorney fees in May, while another defendant paid Myers a $35,000 bribe as part of a broader plan "to silence witnesses through bribery," the government said. Five of the defendants were arrested Monday and were being arraigned and released on $10,000 unsecured bonds in U.S. District Court. Two of the individuals had been indicted previously; the other 18 were indicted Thursday and it was made public Monday. The case is assigned to U.S. District Judge Victoria A. Roberts. Each of the defendants faces up to life prison and $4 million in fines if convicted of conspiracy to distribute more than 2,200 pounds of marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake