The U.S. Attorney’s Office Eastern District of Pennsylvania released the below information:
PHILADELPHIA – First Assistant United States
Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Antoine Clark, 30, Gerald
Spruell, 32, and Daniel Robinson, 36, all of Philadelphia, PA, were convicted
after more than two weeks at trial of charges including conspiracy to
distribute controlled substances, and distribution or possession with intent to
distribute crack cocaine and heroin arising from their operation of an almost
around-the-clock drug delivery service for several years in South Philadelphia.
Between 2013 and 2016,
the defendants and their co-conspirators, known as the “Friends” and “7th
Street” drug trafficking group, delivered crack cocaine and heroin to customers
along the 7th Street corridor in
South Philadelphia using a shared drug phone. The defendants used the phone to
take orders and communicate with customers; they would pass the phone off in
shifts to keep their operation going almost 24 hours per day. FBI agents conducted
surveillance and controlled purchases of narcotics from the defendants using
audio and video recording devices. Agents recovered narcotics sold by the
defendants after stopping their drug customers. During the course of the
investigation, agents also intercepted phone calls and text messages from the
shared drug phone, which documented the defendants’ illicit activities. Upon
defendant Spruell’s arrest in June 2016, Philadelphia Police officers recovered
a number of items related to drug trafficking, including two firearms and live
rounds of ammunition.
“The defendants in this
case ran a drug delivery operation akin to a ‘GrubHub’ or ‘UberEats’ for
narcotics,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Williams. “But despite their
‘friendly’ moniker, they were no friends to this community. To the
contrary, they jeopardized the safety of an entire neighborhood in South
Philadelphia. This conviction marks the definitive end to their
enterprise, and a new beginning for the 7th
Street corridor.”
Each defendant faces a
mandatory minimum sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment, and a maximum of lifetime
imprisonment.
The case was
investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and is being prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorneys Matthew Newcomer and Jason Grenell.
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