Pubdate: Sun, 11 Oct 1998 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Contact: (c) 1998 Houston Chronicle Website: http://www.chron.com/ Author: Jeanne King, Reuters News Service OVER 100 GANG MEMBERS CHARGED IN N.Y. DRUG BUST NEW YORK -- More than 100 members of seven drug gangs, including the notorious Bloods, were indicted Friday, charged with operating a $5.5 million-a-year crack cocaine business that catered to the "suit-and-tie" crowd in midtown Manhattan, police and prosecutors said. Seventy-seven of the 102 defendants charged in what Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau called "one of the largest drug busts in city history" were already in custody. They will be arraigned Tuesday. The others are being sought. The accused are charged with conspiracy, attempted murder, assault, and gun and drug possession. They face 25 years to life in prison if convicted on the top count of conspiracy. Friday's indictments stem from a 10-month investigation by the Manhattan district attorney and the New York Police Department. "This is an important case because not only did it identify and dismantle seven drug gangs ... but it also put out of business gangs ... involved in significant violence," Police Commissioner Howard Safir said. "The customers of these drug gangs were garment workers and midtown executives, the S-and-T (suit-and-tie) crowd. It was a major source of supply for them of drugs," he said. Safir said it was "a real money-making retail business that operated in the wholesale garment district." Prosecutors said 27 of the defendants were members of the Bloods, a violent street gang that police say had its origins in California in 1970. Bloods carry out their initiation by slashing a stranger's face. The Bloods' New York division was founded in 1993 at Rikers Island jail. Morgenthau said members of the Gangsta Killa Bloods communicated with one another about the gang's drug activities by flashing signs and signals and speaking in code. He said gang members, wearing red scarves or bandannas, met at various midtown locations, including a Burger King in Times Square. Gang members were also accused of using youths under the age of 16 to sell drugs, act as lookouts, or carry crack or cocaine for them to various midtown locations, the prosecutor said. Morgenthau said the gangs, working in shifts around the clock, operated out of a West 38th Street hotel and nearby pool hall where nickel ($5) or dime ($10) bags of crack cocaine were sold. "However, if a street-level dealer thought a customer would pay more, he charged the customer accordingly," Morgenthau said. Guns, knives, blackjacks and a crossbow with darts were among the weapons discovered by police when the defendants were arrested. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry