James Corley,
51, was charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance and other
drug charges after a 15-month undercover investigation that used
wiretaps and surveillance, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said.
Forty-four other people were also charged with drug crimes in the dismantling of Corley's operation, known as the Supreme Team, and another drug gang, authorities said.
Corley
supplied cocaine to a second gang called the South Side Bloods, and
low-level dealers grossed about $15,000 a week in drug sales, Kelly
said. Burned by a wiretap before, Corley used at least eight different
phones, authorities said.
"He
had an uncanny ability to keep his associates in the dark. No one knew
where he lived, what phone number he used, what car he drove," Kelly
said.
A call to Corley's lawyer wasn't immediately returned Thursday.
The
case was pieced together by Detective David Leonardi, who said the
dealers used a language called the "5 percenter" where every number and
letter had its own word and members decoded messages about drug orders.
The wiretaps also netted information on illegal guns and a possible
killing in South Carolina.Corley came of age during the crack era of the late 1980s and was an associate of the Supreme Team, which controlled housing projects and corners in Queens, the ground zero of the crack epidemic in New York. Crime was rampant; in 1990, the number of murders hit an all-time high of 2,245.
The
Supreme Team was run by legendary gang leader Kenneth "Supreme"
McGriff, who reputedly funneled drug money into rap music label Murder
Inc. He's now serving life without parole for a pair of murders after a
2007 conviction.
It was a brutal drug gang that came out of the same Queens streets where platinum rappers 50 Cent and Ja Rule emerged years later. At its peak, the Supreme Team's network of dealers was making $200,000 a day, authorities said.
After
McGriff did jail time on a drug conviction, he was released in 1997 and
aligned himself with neighborhood friend and music mogul Irv "Gotti"
Lorenzo. The one-time street thugs produced one film: "Crime Partners," a
straight-to-video affair that featured Ja Rule, Snoop Dogg and Ice-T.
The
Supreme Team was responsible for the shooting of NYPD Officer Edward
Byrne in 1988, authorities said, but Corley wasn't charged in that
killing. He was jailed once in the 1980s on drug charges, and was later
convicted of manslaughter for beating to death a man he believed to be a
police informant, and served more than three years, police said. Continue Reading
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