Pubdate: Wed, 10 Aug 2005 Source: Post-Standard, The (NY) Copyright: 2005, Syracuse Post-Standard Contact: http://www.syracuse.com/poststandard/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/686 Author: John O'Brien, Staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) AGENTS SAY GRANDMA'S 'COOKIES' WERE CRACK Grandma had a special cookie recipe, according to federal agents. Investigators caught 77-year-old Nancy "Grandma" Booth repeatedly in wiretapped phone calls making crack cocaine sales from her Utica home, according to the FBI. Booth was among 26 people arrested Tuesday on charges of running a massive crack cocaine-trafficking ring in the Rome and Utica areas for the past two years. One defendant is from Syracuse, two are from Canastota in Madison County and the rest from Oneida County. Booth appeared in court Tuesday afternoon wearing bright pink slippers and a multicolored housecoat and walking gingerly with a cane. She and the other defendants were in court for their initial court appearance before U.S. Magistrate George Lowe. In the wiretapped calls, Booth refers to eight-balls, or eight-ounce chunks of crack, as "cookies," according to a federal prosecutor. In a wiretapped call on June 17, "Grandma asked Ian to bring a cookie to her house for her nephew," according to an affidavit from FBI Special Agent Anthony Fitzgerald. "Ian told Grandma he was five minutes away," Fitzgerald wrote. "Grandma asked him to hurry because her nephew had someone waiting for it." In the conversation, Booth was telling her accomplice, James "Yellow" Bell, 29, of Utica, that she had a drug customer who was in a hurry to get his drugs, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Fletcher. The group called itself "Shower Posse" and its members had nicknames such as "Pops," "Bo Peep," and "Peaches," according to federal investigators. Agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration estimate the group sold at least four pounds of crack a month for at least the past two years, Fletcher said. Booth isn't the first older person charged in a drug conspiracy. Unlike some who are arrested because they let drug dealers use their homes or phones, Booth was a mid-level dealer herself, Fletcher said. "She's all over the wiretap buying crack," Fletcher said. "She's calling constantly, making sales." Arrested The local defendants include: [Extensive list redacted] - --- MAP posted-by: Beth