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Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Feds Indict Cop, Accused Gang Members in Atlanta

ATLANTA (AP) — Alleged members of the Gangster Disciples, including high-ranking leaders and an Atlanta-area police officer who prosecutors say claimed to be a hit man for the gang, have been charged with racketeering in a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday.

The indictment filed in federal court in Atlanta last week names 32 people accused of participating in coordinated criminal activity, including drug trafficking, robbery, carjacking, extortion, wire fraud, credit card fraud, insurance fraud and bank fraud. Authorities plan a 1 p.m. news conference to discuss the charges.

Federal authorities in Memphis, Tennessee, have also announced a news conference "regarding the indictment of multiple alleged members of the Gangster Disciples," said Louis Goggans, spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office there.

The Gangster Disciples is a violent gang that began in Chicago in the 1970s when the Black Disciples and the Supreme Gangsters merged, the Atlanta indictment says. It's a highly structured and hierarchical organization divided into geographic groups.

Charged in the indictment is Vancito Gumbs, who prosecutors say was a member of the Gangster Disciples while also serving as a police officer in DeKalb County, just outside Atlanta. Gumbs said in August that he killed people as a hit man for the gang, the indictment says.

He traveled with another gang member last fall to "take care of GD business" and called another gang member in October to warn him to stay away from a sports bar that police were raiding and that the other gang member frequented.

DeKalb County police spokesman Major Stephen Fore declined to comment on Gumbs' indictment until a 1 p.m. news conference.

The national leader, known as the chairman, is in prison and is identified in the indictment as L.H.

Board members are the highest ranking gang members after the chairman, and at least one of them, Shauntay Craig, is charged in the Atlanta indictment. State-level leaders are called governors. Regional leaders, who oversee several states, are called governors of governors.

Among those indicted in Atlanta were three people who prosecutors say served as governors of governors at various times: Alonzo Walton oversaw a region that included Georgia, Florida, Texas, Indiana and SouthCarolina; Terrance Summers oversaw Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina and Florida; and Adrian Jackson was governor of governor for the western states, including California.

It was not immediately clear whether any of those named in the indictment had lawyers who could comment on the charges.

___

Associated Press writer Adrian Sainz in Memphis, Tennessee, contributed to this report.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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