United Blood Nation
Founded | October 31, 1993 Mid Atlantic[3] |
---|---|
Ethnicity | Predominantly African American[3] |
Membership (est.) | 7,000–15,000[5] |
Activities | Drug trafficking, prostitution, robbery, extortion and counterfeiting[6] |
Allies | Bloods[2] |
Rivals | Ñetas[3] |
The United Blood Nation, also known as the East Coast Bloods,
History
The United Blood Nation was formed on July 16, 1993, when incarcerated gang leaders
The UBN became the dominant gang on the East Coast during the 1990s, outnumbering the rival Crips. The gang's meteoric rise to the top of the gang hierarchy was halted in 2001, however, when founder Omar Portee was arrested and later convicted of federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) charges. Portee was sentenced to 50 years imprisonment and is currently incarcerated in the federal supermax ADX Florence prison in Colorado. In the years following Portee's incarceration, the UBN has splintered somewhat, with infighting among the gang's subgroups being reported. The UBN's co-founder and once-prominent member, Leonard McKenzie, has allegedly retired from the gangster lifestyle.[11]
Organization
The structure of the United Blood Nation is hierarchical, with each member being designated a specific rank within the gang, which comes with specific duties and responsibilities. The UBN uses a ranking system often disguised with code names to label the leadership structure. The gang's leadership is based in New York City and the New York prison system. The UBN hierarchy, or chain of command, includes a national council ("the Council") consisting of members selected from the leaders of the gang's subgroups ("sets").[2]
All UBN subgroups are governed by a common set of rules originally written by founders Omar Portee and Leonard McKenzie. There are 31 UBN rules known as "The 31." Examples of the rules are: Individual gang members are to operate and conduct themselves as defined by "The 31"; Procedures for infractions or disciplinary actions; "Snitching," or cooperating with law enforcement, is strictly prohibited. Dues are collected from each member for the benefit of the organization. A portion of the dues is saved and utilized locally, while another portion is sent up the chain to gang leadership.[2]
Membership
Members of the gang are mostly
As of 2005, membership was estimated at 15,000 (an inferior faction in the larger scope of organized crime in America). In 2017, the head of the United Blood Nation was alleged by federal prosecutors to be Pedro Gutierrez, who allegedly directed the UBN despite being imprisoned in
Symbols
United Blood Nation factions are identified by the local telephone area code.[9]
Gang graffiti often includes the letter "C" crossed out, the abbreviation "CK" (for "Crip Killer"), the number "031", the letter "S" crossed out (as "Slobs" is an offensive nickname for Bloods).[3]
Gang tattoos often use three dots representing a dog paw, bulldogs, and "M.O.B." (for "Member of Bloods" or "Money Over Bitches").[10]
Investigations and prosecutions
United Blood Nation founder
More than sixty people were arrested on charges of racketeering, conspiracy, extortion, money laundering, or drug crimes on July 25, 2006, during a crackdown on the Nine Trey Gangsters (NTG) faction of the UBN in New Jersey. The indictments were the culmination of an eleven-month investigation, called Operation Nine Connect, involving around five hundred law enforcement officers from federal, state, and local agencies.[16]
Fifteen people linked to the UBN in Charlotte, North Carolina were indicted on February 25, 2009, on federal drug conspiracy and other charges arising from their participation in a cocaine, heroin, and marijuana distribution ring. The prosecutions followed a six-month-long investigation by the FBI and Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department (CMPD).[17]
Operation Heat, an investigation by the Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau, uncovered a conspiracy in which the UBN's Nine Trey Gangsters faction entered into an alliance with the Lucchese crime family to smuggle drugs and pre-paid cell phones into East Jersey State Prison, and led to the arrests of thirty-four members and associates of the Lucchese family's Jersey Crew in May 2010.[18] Dwayne Spears, a "five star general" in the NTG, was among those indicted.[19]
Twenty-eight members of the UBN in North Carolina were arrested on May 18, 2012, and charged with racketeering and related charges, including drug trafficking, firearms trafficking, armed robbery, and murder conspiracy.
On May 18, 2017, eighty-three members of the Nine Trey Gangsters faction of the UBN were arrested and indicted on federal racketeering conspiracy charges and charges related to murder, attempted murder, violent assault, narcotics distribution, firearms possession, and Hobbs Act robbery. A number were also charged with bank fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft related to financial crimes. The arrests were made during a series of coordinated raids involving over six-hundred federal, state and local law enforcement officers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, New York and Florida.[22] Eighty-two people were convicted as a result of the investigation,[23] including Pedro Gutierrez, the "Chairman" of the UBN, who was sentenced to twenty years imprisonment on September 4, 2018.[24]
Over forty people were arrested in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia on December 6, 2017, as a result of Operation Tin Panda, an investigation by the ATF, FBI, and local agencies into UBN-related crimes in the Washington metropolitan area. Firearms and thousands of grams of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, and THC were seized during the operation.[25] Thirty-nine of the defendants were convicted on federal firearms and drug charges. Tarvell Vandiver, the leader of the UBN subdivision Imperial Gangsta Bloods (IGB) in Northern Virginia, was sentenced to twenty years in prison in October 2018.[26]
References
- ^ Wootson, Cleve R. Jr. (30 October 2014). "Final member of local Blood gang sentenced to federal prison". CharlotteObserver.com. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g United Blood Nation history, terminology, background WSOC-TV (May 18, 2017)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i unsigned (n.d.). "Gang Profile - United Blood Nation" (PDF). Sampson County Sheriff's Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 August 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
- ^ a b "Nine Trey gang members sentenced to prison". Retrieved 14 January 2015.
- ^ "National Gang Threat Assessment 2009 – Appendix B. Street Gangs". National Gang Intelligence Center. January 2009. Archived from the original on 28 February 2011. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
- ^ Who are the Nine Trey Gangsters? Henry Culvyhouse, The Daily Times (May 18, 2016)
- ^ "fido.nrk.no" (PDF).
- ^ Staff (May 18, 2017) "United Blood Nation history, terminology, background" WSOC-TV
- ^ a b Wootson, Cleve R. Jr. (30 October 2014). "Final member of local Blood gang sentenced to federal prison". CharlotteObserver.com. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
- ^ a b c "Sureños" (PDF). Sampson County Sheriff's Office. 2005.
- ^ Bloods Street Gang Intelligence Report Virginia State Police (November 2008)
- ^ Gordon, Michael (23 May 2017). "Feds say 'godfather' of Bloods Omari Rosero (definitely not a 'godfather' according to the CIA) ran the Charlotte g". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
- ^ 15 Indicted in Crackdown on Bloods Gang Kevin Flynn, The New York Times (May 9, 2001)
- ^ "FOUNDER AND LEADER OF VIOLENT PRISON GANG, THE 'UNITED BLOOD NATION', SENTENCED TO 50 YEARS' IMPRISONMENT BY U.S. COURT" (PDF). United States Attorney Southern District of New York. Retrieved 17 October 2010.
- ^ Bloods-Soaked – Gang Lord Gets 50 Yrs For Thug Life John Lehmann, New York Post (April 15, 2003)
- ^ Gang Crackdown in New Jersey Leads to More Than 60 Arrests Laura Mansnerus, The New York Times (July 26, 2006)
- fbi.gov(February 25, 2009)
- The Daily Voice(June 18, 2015)
- ^ N.J. wiretaps detail alliance of mobsters and Bloods George Anastasia, The Philadelphia Inquirer (May 30, 2010)
- fbi.gov(May 23, 2012)
- justice.gov(October 29, 2014)
- justice.gov(May 18, 2017)
- justice.gov(October 27, 2020)
- justice.gov(September 4, 2018)
- ^ 28 arrested in DC, Maryland, and Virginia as part of Blood gang-related FBI, ATF operation, Brad Bell, WJLA-TV (December 6, 2017)
- ^ Virginia leader of Bloods gang gets 20 years for drug trafficking and gun crimes WJLA-TV (October 29, 2018)