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January 20, 2011

Youth counselor sentenced for leading gang

A youth counselor for a city-funded organization that worked to reduce crime in West Baltimore was sentenced on Thursday to 14 years in prison for leading a gang and organizing drug dealing, money laundering and robberies, according to the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Federal prosecutors described Todd Duncan, 36, as the “city-wide commander” of the Black Guerrilla Family, a gang founded in California in the 1960s that authorities say is responsible for selling heroin and in Baltimore.

Federal authorities accused Duncan of using his outreach work with Operation Safe Streets as a cover for drug dealing, and for promoting violence even as he got paid to help stop the bloodshed. His attorney has said previously that his client is not a violent person.

U.S. District Judge James D. Quarles Jr. sentenced Duncan in accordance with a plea agreement reached with prosecutors in September, when he pleaded guilty to one count of racketeering and admitted his involvement in one of the most powerful and violent gangs in the state.

In a statement, prosecutors said Duncan ran the gang from 2006 through the summer of 2010 and helped supply heroin to various street-corner drug shops around Baltimore. They also said he arranged bulk sales of the drug to wholesale customers.

Duncan was one of 15 people indicted on charges related to the gang in July 2009. He started working as a youth counselor in 2007 as part of a “Safe Streets” program operated by the Communities Organized to Improve Life Inc., or COIL, at a West Baltimore community center.

Another counselor there, Ronald “Piper” Scott, has also pleaded guilty to drug distribution as part of the same case and faces 20 years in prison when he is sentenced Feb. 20.

Safe Streets is a nationally-acclaimed model that started in Chicago and uses ex-offenders to mediate disputes on the street before they turn violent. Authorities have credited the program on the Eastside, run by the Living Classrooms Foundation, with preventing many shootings and slayings.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake cut off $1 million in funding to Safe Streets in East Baltimore and another one in South Baltimore’s Cherry Hill after the allegations first surfaced about the program on the Westside. By that time, the city had already cut off payments to COIL citing deficiencies in standards.

The mayor restored the money to the two programs in May, saying a task force could not substantiate allegations that the mediation groups in those locations were controlled by gangs. The task force recommended that the city sever its ties and let nonprofits take over the groups.

Posted by Peter Hermann at 6:04 PM | | Comments (0)
Categories: Gangs, West Baltimore
        

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About Peter Hermann
Peter Hermann started covering news for The Baltimore Sun in 1990, first in Anne Arundel County and, starting in 1994, reporting on the Baltimore Police Department. In 2001, he was assigned to Jerusalem as the Baltimore Sun's Middle East correspondent. He returned in 2005 as an assistant city editor overseeing crime coverage. In 2008, Peter returned to the beat as a daily reporter and blogger. A recent BBC report featured him in a segment on the harsh realities of covering crime in Baltimore.

Coverage will focus on crime trends, problems in neighborhoods in the city and elsewhere, profiles of victims and police officers and try to offer readers a fresh perspective on one of the most vexing issues facing Baltimore and its future.



Contributing to this blog is Justin Fenton, who joined The Sun in 2005 and has covered the Baltimore City Police Department and the criminal justice system since 2008. His work includes an investigation into Cal Ripken Jr.’s minor league baseball stadium deal with his hometown of Aberdeen, a three-part series chronicling a ruthless con woman, coverage of the killing of five Amish children at a schoolhouse in Nickel Mines, Pa., and a job swap with a British crime reporter to explore differences in crime-fighting. A special report looking into how city police handle rape cases led to sweeping reforms that changed the way sexual assaults are investigated in Baltimore. He was recognized as the best reporter in Baltimore by the City Paper in 2010 and by Baltimore Magazine in 2011.
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