Pubdate: Sun, 29 Nov 2009
Source: Stamford Advocate, The (CT)
Copyright: 2009 Southern Connecticut Newspaper, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1522
Author: John Nickerson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

MAJOR PAST NORWALK DRUG INVESTIGATION STILL REVERBERATES

NORWALK -- A city police detective who led an FBI task  force to
investigate rampant drug dealing at South  Norwalk's Washington
Village public housing complex  three years ago said he could not have
imagined at the  operation's outset how successful it would be.

But after the 18-month operation by the FBI's Safe  Streets Task Force
snared 22 men and women, each later  convicted for drug dealing, and
seized several  kilograms of narcotics, eight guns and more than
$20,000 in cash, Detective Terry Blake, an 11-year  department
veteran, said the public housing complex on  Water Street is a much
safer place to live.

Standing inside Washington Village about 10 days ago  just before
school let out, Blake, 34, looked over an  empty playground.

That wasn't always the way it was in the 136-unit tidy  brick complex
bounded by Water Street to the east, Day  Street to the west and
Raymond Street to the north.

"Washington Village is not like it was. There is no one  standing on
the corner dealing crack. The violence and  continued shootings have
stopped," Blake said.

Norwalk police Chief Harry Rilling said, "Any time you  have criminals
infiltrate a housing authority property,  it affects the quality of
life significantly and people  don't feel safe."

And when a large number of criminals are removed from  the streets of
Norwalk as the result of one long-term  investigation that operation
has to be deemed a  triumph, Rilling said.

"It was a tremendous success and the defendants will go away for
significant jail terms," he said.

The federal investigation had all the elements of a  big-city crime
thriller, replete with the attempted  murder of a federal witness at
point blank range, the  discovery of 300 grams of crack cocaine
stashed in the  stone wall of an elite Stamford prep school, hidden
trap doors in cars filled with drugs and guns, and the  wiretapping of
tens of thousands of cell phone calls.  Although the investigation had
been reported in bits  and pieces, the full story of how it brought
down a  pair of Stamford's leading drug dealers has never been  told.

According to a recently unsealed 46-page sworn  affidavit by FBI
Special Agent Christopher Munger,  Washington Village -- the oldest
public housing complex  in the state, having opened in 1941 -- had
been an  open-air drug market operated by the Washington Village
Bloods gang since 2000.

In a commendation to the Safe Streets Task Force, which  counted Blake
as a member from 2006 to earlier this  year, U.S. Attorney Tracy Lee
Dayton described the area  prior to the operation: "One need only
stand on the  corner of Raymond Street in Norwalk and watch the
procession of cars traveling into and out of Washington  Village to
recognize the plague of narcotics  trafficking that had descended upon
the residents of  that community."

Dayton, who obtained guilty pleas from all 22  defendants in the case,
said in that commendation,  released one month ago, that the drug
organization was  responsible for dealing 6.5 to 11 pounds of crack
and  powder cocaine per week in the Stamford and Norwalk  areas.

With all but a few defendants sentenced at this point,  Blake said he
could now talk about the operation that  monitored 20,000 calls on
three wiretapped phones in  the space of a little more than two months
from  mid-November 2007 into January 2008.

When he first pitched the drug investigation to the  task force in
fall 2006, he, like many officers in  Norwalk, knew that something was
very wrong at  Washington Village.

Blake, who joined the department in 1998, said, "It was  a big problem
for us. There was a lot of violent crime  in the way of shootings and
shots fired and there were  incessant complaints of narcotics dealing.
The  residents were sick of it, but they were in fear of  retribution
for contacting us."

With the help of confidential informants, witnesses and  two people
identified only as "sources of information,"  the task force,
consisting of four FBI agents and  officers from the Bridgeport,
Trumbull, Fairfield and  Norwalk police departments, made scores of
drug buys  around Washington Village beginning in January 2007,  Blake
said.

A significant early success in the operation came on  Sept. 4, 2007,
when East Norwalk resident Trayson  Stevens, identified by the FBI as
a member of the  Washington Village Bloods, drove a cooperating
witness  working with the task force to Stamford to purchase 128
grams of crack cocaine.

The task force witness -- carrying $4,400 in federal  evidence money
and a hidden recording device -- and  Stevens, known on the street as
"Tray 8," met at Ryan  Park behind the Norwalk Economic Opportunity
Now  building and drove together to a parking lot off  Stamford's East
Main Street, according to Munger's  affidavit.

With Blake, FBI agents and members of Norwalk's Special  Services Unit
watching and taking pictures, a green  Toyota Camry and a black BMW
pulled in the lot a few  minutes later, Blake said.

Stevens got into the Toyota, then returned to the  informant's car.
They drove off together, and Stevens  passed the informant a little
more than 4 ounces of  crack -- the largest task force purchase of the
entire  operation -- for the $4,400 cash, Munger's affidavit  said.

The drug deal was important because it led the task  force to top
Stamford narcotics dealers Isni "Ease"  Gjuraj, who was in the BMW,
and Gjuraj's cousin Arbnor  "Cookie" Gjini, who was in the Toyota,
Munger's  affidavit said.

Task force agents determined that Diana Gjuraj, Isni's  sister, owned
the BMW and Gjini owned the Toyota. This  past summer, Diana Gjuraj,
37, of Stamford, was charged  with money laundering, as well as aiding
and abetting  her brother's narcotics business. She has pleaded not
guilty in the case.

After checking with Stamford police, the task force  discovered that
Isni Gjuraj, 28, of Glenbrook Road,  Stamford, the son of Albanian
immigrants brought up in  the Stamford projects who got his start
dealing drugs  selling marijuana to New Canaan High School students,
had been arrested in Stamford for narcotics sales and  given a
three-year suspended sentence in 2001.

Along with convictions for breach of peace, assault and  threatening,
Gjini, 26, also of Glenbrook Road, had a  conviction for selling a
controlled substance in 2006.

The two became the focus of the task force in its quest  to find out
who was supplying Washington Village Bloods  with drugs, Blake said.
"It became clear at that point  who the top guys were," he said.

The investigation continued, with several more  successes coming in
the form of wiretaps and the use of  informants.

On Nov. 14, 2007, special FBI agent Munger applied for  a wiretap on
Stevens' phone; the task force would  eventually record more than
14,000 conversations on it.

With the wire on Stevens' phone, the investigation  picked up pace,
and over the course of the next two to  three months, the task force,
sometimes working in  18-hour shifts, seven days per week, identified
more  members of the organization, Blake said. Among those  was
Norwalk resident Richard Davis, the No. 3 man under  Gjuraj and Gjini.

The next big break in the operation came in Stamford on  Nov. 27,
2007, when police pulled over Gjuraj, who was  driving a Jeep
Cherokee. Inside the vehicle -- just as  a cooperating witness had
tipped off the task force --  police found 125 grams of crack cocaine
and 10 cell  phones, Blake said.

But despite a high bond, Gjuraj was back on the street  a few hours
later, Blake said.

According to evidence obtained later, Gjuraj then  became so angry
that he put out a hit on the male  informant. On Christmas Eve 2007,
in Bridgeport, the  informant was shot six times at point-blank range,
but  lived. Gjuraj paid the gunman, Antonio "Biggie Smalls"  Robinson,
of Stamford, 100 grams of cocaine and $1,000  for the shooting, court
records show.

A few days later, just after putting a wire on two of  Davis' phones,
investigators intercepted calls in which  Gjuraj found out the
informant was still alive and put  out another order for his death.
The informant, who  later spoke of his wounds during Gjuraj's
sentencing,  was taken into protective custody and moved out of  state.

The investigation peaked in the first two months of  2008, with the
arrests of Davis, Gjuraj and Gjini in  January and the takedown of the
entire organization in  mid-February.

On Jan. 17, 2008, Davis was pulled over in Gjuraj's  Jeep in
Bridgeport. Hidden in a secret compartment in  the vehicle, police
found 200 grams of cocaine, a  handgun and 26 bullets.

Within a few days of Davis' arrest, working with  information obtained
in the investigation, the task  force, led by a Norwalk drug-sniffing
dog, seized 300  grams of crack cocaine hidden in a stone wall at the
private King Low Heywood Thomas school on Newfield  Avenue in
Stamford, Blake said.

A few days later, on Jan. 20, the task force executed a  search
warrant on Gjini's Toyota Camry. Inside a "trap"  in the car's center
console were 600 grams (1.3 pounds)  of powder cocaine, 800 grams (1.8
pounds) of crack  cocaine, a fully loaded handgun and $3,000 in cash,
court records show. Gjuraj and Gjini went into hiding  in New York,
but the pair were arrested at state  Superior Court in Stamford days
later, on Jan. 30, when  Gjuraj drove Gjini to visit his probation
officer at  the courthouse. Both have been locked up ever since.

Then, on Feb. 18, starting at 6 a.m., 11 teams --  consisting of
members of Norwalk's police Emergency  Services and Special Services
units, and the FBI's Safe  Streets Task Force and SWAT team -- began
picking up  the rest of the crew, Blake said.

Asked for a comment about the task force operation,  Gjuraj's defense
attorney Robert Gulash said that  Gjuraj became involved with people
and activities that  were "way over his head." Gjuraj pleaded guilty
in  November 2008 to one count of retaliating against a  witness, one
count of conspiracy to possess with intent  to distribute crack
cocaine, and one count of robbery.  In August, he was sentenced in New
Haven federal court  to 26 years and eight months behind bars.

After pleading guilty to two counts of conspiracy to  distribute 50
grams or more of crack cocaine, Gjini was  sentenced in August to 14
years in prison and 10 years  supervised release.

Davis, 33, pleaded guilty to one count of retaliating  against a
witness and one count of conspiracy to  possess with intent to
distribute 50 grams or more of  crack cocaine. At his sentencing,
scheduled for March,  he faces a maximum life sentence for his role in
the  informant's shooting.

Robinson, 38, pleaded guilty to retaliating against a  witness and one
count of conspiracy to possess with  intent to distribute 50 grams or
more of crack cocaine;  he faces a mandatory minimum 20 years or a
maximum life  sentence behind bars.

In August, Stevens was sentenced to 14 years in prison  after he
pleaded guilty to possession with intent to  distribute more than 50
grams or more of crack cocaine.

Blake, now an investigator in the Police Department's  detective
bureau, said he was happy to have helped the  community be safer.

"It was a long and significant investigation, and the  bad guys were
true criminals causing significant  problems to the community, and it
is nice where people  like that go away," Blake said. 
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