|
Lake County M.E.G.
News Articles
North Chicago man gets
prison in fatal overdose
Article updated: 9/1/2011
A
North Chicago man was
sentenced to five years in
prison Thursday after
admitting he provided the
heroin that killed an
Antioch woman.Sederls
Williams, 33, pleaded guilty
to delivery of a controlled
substance during a hearing
before Lake County Circuit
Judge John Phillips.
Assistant State’s Attorney
Suzanne Willett said
Williams, of the 1000 block
of Glenn Drive, sold the
heroin to Lindsey Smith, 22,
on June 12, 2010. Smith was
found unresponsive later
that day in a room at the
Sunset Motel, 267 Route 173,
and an autopsy determined
she had died of a heroin
overdose. Antioch police and
agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group interviewed people who
had been seen with Smith
that day, and those people
identified Williams.
Williams was arrested Sept.
22, and was also charged
with drug-induced homicide
in the case. Willett said
she agreed to drop the more
serious charge in exchange
for Williams’ guilty plea.
Smith’s family, who were in
the courtroom Thursday, had
approved the negotiation,
Willett added. Williams had
been held on $350,000 bond
since his arrest.
SECOND MAN GUILTY IN POT
PLANE CASE
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald
June 29,2011
The second of two California
brothers accused of flying
an airplane carrying 170
pounds of marijuana into
Lake County pleaded guilty
Tuesday.Just as his brother
did earlier this month,
Nicholas Fejer, 23, agreed
to testify against the
Aurora man accused of
setting up and financing the
May 4 deal.Nicholas Fejer
and Michael Fejer, 27, both
of Oceanside, Cal., were
arrested by agents of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group shortly
after the twin-engine Beech
Baron landed at Waukegan
Regional Airport.The plane
contained eight pieces of
luggage containing 170
pounds of marijuana.
Nicholas Fejer said the pot
was loaded into the plane on
May 3 by himself, his
brother and Brian Daugherty
of Aurora.When he pleaded
guilty June 2, Michael Fejer
said Daugherty had purchased
the marijuana and had given
him $70,000 of the $90,000
purchase price of the
airplane.After arresting the
Fejers, MEG agents waited
until Daugherty arrived at
the airport carrying keys to
the hanger where the plane
was parked and took him into
custody.Assistant State’s
Attorney Suzanne Willett
said police found $500,000
in cash in Daugherty’s car
after he was
arrested.Nicholas Fejer
pleaded guilty to possession
of marijuana and faces a
maximum sentence of 15 years
in prison when he returns to
court Aug. 26.His brother
accepted a similar offer
from prosecutors. Charges of
marijuana trafficking
against both were dropped in
exchange for the guilty
pleas.Daugherty, 30, of the
1000 block of Chelsea Lane,
has pleaded not guilty to
marijuana trafficking and
possession charges and faces
up to 60 years in
prison.Willett said Michael
Fejer posted $30,000 in cash
and has returned to
California to await his Aug.
26 court date. Daugherty
posted $100,000 cash for
bond shortly after his
arrest and is due in court
July 21.Nicholas Fejer is
held in the Lake County jail
on $100,000 bond..
PROSECUTORS:PLANE CARRIED
CARGO OF MARIJUANA
By Ruth Fuller | Special to
the Tribune
May 10, 2011
Lake County authorities say
they have seized a
private plane
that was carrying 170 pounds
of marijuana when it landed
in Waukegan from
California,
and three men have been
charged in a plot to
distribute the pot.
Michael Fejer, 27, of
Oceanside, Cal., who
authorities said owned and
piloted the plane, appeared
this morning before Lake
County Circuit Judge Raymond
Collins, who agreed to
reduce Fejer’s bond from $1
million to $750,000. Fejer
and his brother, Nicholas
Fejer, 23, also of
Oceanside, flew into
Waukegan Regional
Airport
at about 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday, carrying the
shipment of pot whose value
was estimated at $500,000 to
$1 million, Lake County
Assistant State’s Attorney
Suzanne Willett said.
Michael Fejer, 27, of
California charged with drug
trafficking and unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance. One of three men
charged with flying more
than a half a million
dollars’ worth of marijuana
into Waukegan Regional
Airport pleaded not guilty
in court Tuesday. Michael
Fejer, 23, pleaded not
guilty to unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance with intent to
deliver and unlawful
trafficking of marijuana
charges. If convicted, he
faces up to 60 years in
prison.
The Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group revieved a
tip that a plane carrying
marijuana would land at the
airport on May 5. Officers
and drug-sniffing dogs were
waiting when Fejer and his
brother, Nicholas Fejer, 23,
arrived. They were supposed
to meet with Brian
Daughterty, 30, of Aurora to
deliver about 170 pounds of
marijuana, officials said.
The Fejers departed from
Lake Tahoe, Calif., on May 4
and were apprehended in
Waukegan early May 5.
Michael Fejer is in county
custody in lieu of $750,000
bond. He is due back in
court Monday and his trial
is set for June 24. Nicholas
Fejer is in custody in lieu
of $1 million bond pending
arraignment Thursday.
Daughterty is free on $1
million bond pending
arraignment June 9.
LAKE COUNTY PAIR ADMIT
MARIJUANA POSSESSION
By Tony Gordan
Daily Herald
October 25, 2010
A Waukegan man and a
Wildwood woman both pleaded
guilty Monday to possession
of the marijuana police
found when they raided the
woman’s house. Simmie Sims,
35, was sentenced to 18
months in prison and Shanda
Lezine, 36, received two
years on probation as a
result of their guilty pleas
to possession of marijuana
with the intent to deliver.
Lake County Assistant
State’s Attorney Brett Henne
said agents of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group served a
search warrant on Lezine’s
residence in the 33000 block
of Indian Lane on Aug. 6.
Police found Lezine sitting
in a car in the driveway of
the residence with about two
ounces of marijuana in two
separate bags. Sims, of the
2500 block of Berkshire
Court, was found inside the
house along with a little
more than six ounces of
marijuana. Police also
confiscated a digital scale
and $984 in cash during the
raid, Henne said. Henne told
Circuit Judge James Booras
that Sims had felony
convictions for drug
possession in 1993, 2001,
2003 and 2005, while Lezine
had no prior significant
criminal history.
TWO ARRESTED IN WAKE OF RAID
ON FOX LAKE HOUSE
By Jake Griffin |
Daily Herald Staff
Contact writer
Published: 10/25/2007
Two men were arrested after
members of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group served a search
warrant at a Fox Lake house
Wednesday evening and found
cocaine, authorities said.
Larry Lindenman, director of
the multi-jurisdictional
task force, said officers
found about 10 ounces of the
drug during an initial sweep
of the home at 49 Marvin St.
The two unidentified men "in
their 30s" were expected to
be processed Wednesday night
and be in a Lake County
courtroom today to be
formally charged, Lindenman
said.
The pair likely face more
than just the drug charges,
he added, and other arrests
may occur as a result of
Wednesday's raid, Lindenman
said. Lindenman said
community complaints about
activity at the house led to
an investigation that went
on for a "couple of weeks"
leading up to Wednesday's
raid. He also said the
warrant was served with the
help of the Northern
Illinois Police Alert System
Emergency Services Team, but
the suspect was taken into
custody without incident.
"We utilized the NIPAS team
because we were concerned
about potential violence,"
Lindenman said. The men are
believed to be members of a
notorious motorcycle gang,
police officials said.
Authorities spent several
hours at the house looking
for more evidence and
contraband before finally
clearing out just before 8
p.m. Lindenman said one
vehicle was towed from the
scene.
A POTENTIOL DISASTER
By FRANK ABDERHOLDEN
The News Sun
September 19, 2007
The arsenal inside the
Mundelein Police Department
was impressive: A
.50-caliber handgun known as
the "hand cannon," a
semi-automatic Uzi machine
gun, antique rifles, an
assortment of knives and
.38-caliber handguns. And
the weapons on display were
only half of the guns and
rifles confiscated Friday
from the home of Michael
Sonka, 55, of 910 Granville
Ave., Mundelein. There were
a total of 636 firearms,
plus the three 9mm handguns
that undercover police
purchased along with five
boxes of ammunition. 
Lake County authorities
confiscated more than 600
guns and rifles during a
sting operation at the
Mundelein home of Michael
Sonka). "It was one of
the largest (gun seizures)
in Lake County history,"
said Larry Lindenman, a
master sergeant with the
Illinois State Police and
executive director of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. The guns
were valued at between
$300,000 and $400,000, and
police also confiscated more
than $4,000 in cash .I saw
the police go up there on
Friday," said 84-year-old
Mabel Krueger, who lives a
few doors down from Sonka.
Another neighbor who wanted
to remain anonymous said, "I
am surprised (by the number
of guns). I never noted
anything strange. I know who
he is, but he stuck to
himself. I'm really shocked.
He seems like a good
neighbor," she said.Another
neighbor, Wendy Theresi, 46,
said she wasn't bothered
about the news. She has
lived there 12 years and
raised three children in
what she described as a
"wonderful neighborhood.
We're adding an addition
because we don't want to
move," she said.Sonka, who
is retired, has had a
Federal Firearms License
since July 1989, but he
didn't start recording a lot
of sales activity until
2001. The license allows an
individual to engage in a
business pertaining to the
manufacture of firearms and
ammunition or the interstate
and intrastate sale of
firearms. He ran into
problems with the village
because he was running the
business out of his
home."This was certainly not
something we want going on
in a residential
neighborhood," said
Mundelein Police Chief
Raymond Rose. "If you are
going to run a business, you
have to do it the right
way," he said."We're very
fortunate and he's very
fortunate that he wasn't set
up. This was a potential
disaster," Rose said,
referring to the fact that
not all the weapons were
locked in storage
lockers."That was an
obligation he had. He was a
potential hazard to the
community," Rose
said.Mundelein police
developed information that
Sonka was selling guns out
of his house and his Federal
Firearms License had expired
four months earlier. They
worked with MEG to set up a
sting, and on Friday Sonka
allegedly sold the guns and
ammunition to an undercover
police officer during a
short meeting.Sonka was
charged with gun running, a
Class 1 felony, for selling
three or more guns and
unlawful sale of a firearm
for not enforcing the
three-day "cooling off
period" and failed to do the
necessary paperwork for the
sale. He was also cited
under village ordinance for
not having a business
license. He was released on
a $75,000 signature bond. If
he is convicted, the
firearms would most likely
be destroyed.
BAR OWNER CHARGED IN
GAMBLING STING
By Jason King
Daily Herald Staff Writer
January 25, 2007
The owner of a Round Lake
bar was arrested Wednesday
night for running an illegal
gambling operation. Round
Lake Police, with
cooperation from other local
law enforcement agencies and
the Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, raided
the Four Coynes Inn, 302
Nippersink Road; around 7:45
p.m. Inside, officers found
a three-table poker
tournament in progress, as
well as two illegal slot
machines. Police Chief Cliff
Metaxa said it was also
common to find people
playing dice at the bar, and
the bar also operated sports
betting pools. “Those kinds
of things go on in bars
across the county. It’s
illegal,” Metaxa said. “The
reason we’re here tonight is
because this was so
blatant.” Police arrested
Scott Coyne of McHenry, who
owns the bar. Coyne faces
charges for gambling as well
as keeping a gaming place.
Four Coynes was also one of
several Round Lake bars
caught in a police sting
last month for selling
alcohol to minors. In all,
24 people — 18 men and six
women — were detained
Wednesday, though formal
charges were not announced
Wednesday night. Police,
with the assistance of Lake
County MEG, a
multi-jurisdictional task
force, investigated the bar
for the past three months,
which included undercover
officers participating in
the gambling. Metaxa said
patrons had to gain the
trust of the bartender, who
was not named because she
had not yet been formally
charged, to get into the
poker tournaments. Those
chosen were introduced to
Coyne. Inside the bar
Wednesday night, three
folding tables were littered
with poker chips, playing
cards and half-consumed
beers. Inside the kitchen,
police found a sheet that
noted the $20 buy-in price
for the game, and the
payouts for the winners.
Payouts increased with the
number of people in the
tournament. Metaxa said the
investigation began when a
Round Lake resident tipped
police off to the gambling.
Fifty-three officers from
several departments
participated in the sting.
“It went very smooth,”
Metaxa said. “Anytime you
have that many officers
going in with guns drawn,
there’s concern. This went
very well.”
ZION ROUNDUP NETS 40
THREE MONTH INVESTIGATION
TARGETED DRUG DEALERS,
BUYERS IN SPECIFIC AREAS
By Tony Gordon
Legal Affairs Writer
January 31, 2006
Police from 18 agencies have
arrested 40 people as a
result of a three-month
investigation into street
sales of drugs in Zion,
officials said Monday. The
Operation Street Sweeper
probe, under the direction
of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, targeted open-air
sales in four areas of the
northern Lake County city.
Police Chief Douglas Malcolm
said areas known for casual
small sales of crack cocaine
and marijuana targeted
included the 900 block of
Lorelei Drive, the 2100
block of Gideon Avenue, the
2200 block of Hebron Avenue
and the 2800 block of
Galilee Avenue. In 40
transactions, undercover
agents purchased a total of
nearly 6 ounces of crack
cocaine worth an estimated
$22,680 and a little more
than 5 ounces of marijuana
worth about $1,500. Police
said all of the purchases
were recorded on video and
audiotape.
On Jan. 24 and 25, 130
officers from state, federal
and local police agencies
arrested many of the
dealers, Malcolm said. From
Thursday through Saturday, a
second phase of the
investigation used
concentrated traffic patrols
in the suspect areas to seek
out the customers of the
dealers. “We went out and
made traffic stops based on
moving violations,”
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group Supervisor Mark Hobson
said. “We tried to develop
drug cases out of the
traffic stops. Almost all of
the people arrested are from
Zion, police said. They are
charged with offenses
ranging from felonies
carrying mandatory prison
terms to misdemeanors.
State’s Attorney Michael
Waller said investigations
such as Street Sweeper are
about making neighborhoods
safer for the people who
live in them. “There is
nothing that ruins a
neighborhood like an
open-air drug market,”
Waller said. “If you went
out into those neighborhoods
today, I am sure you would
find people who are glad the
drug dealers are gone.”
ZION — forty people have
been arrested, culminating a
three-month drug trafficking
investigation involving as
many as 18 law enforcement
agencies in Lake County and
beyond.
During the investigation,
undercover police officers
and drug agents purchased
crack cocaine and marijuana
from drug dealers on the
streets of Zion, said Zion
Police Chief Doug Malcolm,
noting the transactions were
videotaped. At a news
conference announcing the
outcome of the investigation
Monday at the Zion Police
Department, Malcolm praised
officers for risking their
lives in the operation and
said the roundup of the
offenders "makes our
neighborhoods safer and
improves the quality of life
in the area."
As many as 130 officers and
drug agents were involved in
the investigation which
began in November. Of the 40
arrested, many were charged
with possession of drugs,
possession with intent to
sell and criminal drug
conspiracy.
In addition, 30 traffic
tickets and 50 written
traffic violation warnings
were issued.
The investigation led to
searches made by SWAT teams
at 2110 Gabriel Ave., 1820
Jethro Ave. and 2105 Gideon
Ave., all in Zion.
During the wide-ranging
operation, undercover agents
made 40 purchases valued at
$23,000 from street dealers
including 168 grams of crack
cocaine and 150 grams of
marijuana, according to
Patrick Gara of the
Mundelein Police Department.
The youngest purchaser, as
observed by undercover
agents, was a 12-year-old
girl.
Mark Rasmussen, director of
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, stressed
the operation "sent a clear
message that law enforcement
agencies are here to protect
and serve the community."
He said similar operations
are either in the works or
planned for other areas in
the county.
"Nothing ruins a
neighborhood more than an
open drug market. Some
dealers were operating
within 1,000 feet of a
church, a school and a
park," said State's Attorney
Michael Waller.
He said because the
transactions were
videotaped, they would make
solid cases in court.
Sheriff Gary Del Re called
the operation "an excellent
example of law enforcement
agencies working together."
Although participating
officers risked their lives
in the operation, there were
no incidents requiring the
use of weapons, he pointed
out. No guns were seized.
The investigation also led
officers to come into close
contact with gang members
from five area gangs. "Gang
offenders were intertwined
with drug dealers," said
Mark Hobson of the Lake
County Sheriff's Office.
In addition to Zion Police,
the Sheriff's Office, Lake
County MEG and the State's
Attorney's Office, other
participating agencies
included Illinois State
Police, DuPage County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, North Central
Narcotics Task Force,
federal Bureau of Alcohol
Tobacco and Firearms and the
Illinois Department of
Children and Family
Services.
Other participating police
departments were those of
Deerfield, Grayslake,
Gurnee, Hawthorn Woods, Lake
Zurich, Libertyville, Round
Lake Park, Round Lake
Heights and Mundelein.
The 40 arrested and their
charges:
• Belinad Caples, 31, of
Zion, two counts of unlawful
delivery of a controlled
substance within 1,000 feet
of a park.
• Kenneth D. Knight, 27, of
Waukegan, two counts of
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
• Eddie Little, 33, of Zion,
arrest warrant for escape,
burglary and resisting
arrest.
• Stephanie Dixon, 28, of
Zion, aiding a fugitive.
• Jimmy Alexander, 35, of
Zion, failure to register as
a sex offender.
• Rahsaan Terry, 31, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
drug paraphernalia.
• Anthony Winters, 45, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
marijuana.
• Marcus Williams, 21, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
marijuana with intent to
deliver.
• George Jones, 46, of Zion,
unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance within
1,000 feet of a park.
• Marina C. Cruz, 19, of
Zion, outstanding arrest
warrant for theft.
• Sonya Freeman, 37, of
Zion, two counts of unlawful
delivery of a controlled
substance.
• Thadius Williams, 66, of
Zion unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance.
• Tinisha Adams, 21, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
a controlled substance,
unlawful delivery, unlawful
possession of marijuana and
unlawful possession of drug
paraphernalia.
• Jorie Adams, 36, of Zion,
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance,
unlawful delivery, unlawful
possession of drug
paraphernalia and unlawful
possession of marijuana.
• Susan Yenkle, 34, of Zion,
two counts of unlawful
possession of controlled
substance, two counts of
unlawful delivery and
criminal drug conspiracy.
• Avis J. Minor, 25, of
Zion, four counts of
unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance, three
counts of unlawful
possession, criminal drug
conspiracy and unlawful
delivery of marijuana.
• Sara D. Glenn, 28, of
Zion, two counts of unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance and two counts of
unlawful deliver.
• Melissa Gartner, 21, of
Hainesville, unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance and unlawful
delivery.
• Melissa A. Matz, 22, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
a controlled substance,
failure to register as a sex
offender.
• Alonso Dixon, 27, of Zion,
unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance.
• Eric Nixon, 22, of Zion,
unlawful possession of
marijuana with intent to
deliver.
• Louis Chattard, 40, of
Zion, unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance.
• Fiona S. Jones, 26, of
Park City, no valid driver's
license.
• Ulysses Jacobs, 73, of
Zion, driving under the
influence of drugs and
possession of drug
paraphernalia.
• Mark Kohnke, 39, of Zion,
of possession of drug
paraphernalia.
• Shawn D. Brill, 24, of
Zion, driving with a revoked
license.
• Larnelle W. Hoskins, 25,
of Zion, driving with a
suspended license.
• Christopher J. Jones, 19,
of Zion, wanted on warrant
for driving with suspended
license.
• Demeattrice A. Wilcox, 25,
of North Chicago, unlawful
possession of cannabis.
• Charles L. Mostoicz, 25,
of Zion, attempted
obstruction of justice.
• Jonathan Holmes, 27, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
marijuana, unlawful
possession of drug
paraphernalia and driving
with a suspended license.
• Arthur N. DeWolff, 28, of
Pleasant Prairie, unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance and unlawful
possession of marijuana.
• Cedtron Duffie, 18, of
Zion, of unlawful possession
of marijuana.
• Shawn Taylor, 34, of Zion,
unlawful possession of
marijuana with intent to
deliver and unlawful
possession of drug
paraphernalia.
• Kwantez Taylor, 30, of
Zion, unlawful possession of
marijuana with intent to
deliver and unlawful
possession of drug
paraphernalia.
• Jose Rivera, 25, of Zion,
driving with a suspended
license.
• Jeronis L. Johnson, 29, of
Zion, driving with a revoked
license and wanted for
alleged possession of a
stolen vehicle.
• Michael Taylor, 32, of
Zion, driving with a
suspended license.
• Antonio Harris, 31, of
Zion, driving with a revoked
license.
• Desiree Monk, 35, of Zion,
driving with a suspended
license.
FORMER FUGITIVE ORDERED TO
START 30 YEAR PRISON
SENTENCE
By Tony Gordon Daily
Herald Legal Affairs Writer
March 28, 2006
A Lake County judge said
Monday a man sentenced to 30
years in prison after
fleeing the country during
his trial on drug charges
must begin serving that
sentence. Besnick Saliu, 36,
was arrested in Bulgaria
last year after being on the
run for more than two years.
Saliu, formerly of Island
Lake, was arrested Nov. 8,
2000, and accused of selling
a pound of cocaine to
undercover agents of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. He
disappeared Aug. 1, 2003, at
the end of the first day of
his trial before Circuit
Judge James Booras. The
trial continued in Saliu’s
absence and he was
convicted. Booras handed
down the 30-year sentence
two months later. The FBI
issued a worldwide alert for
Saliu shortly after his
disappearance. He was
captured as he tried to
cross into Bulgaria from
Macedonia on Oct. 10 of last
year. He was returned to
Lake County earlier this
year. On Monday, Chicago
attorney Tom Brandstrader
asked Booras to grant Saliu
a new sentencing hearing.
Saliu should be given the
right to participate in a
presentence investigation of
his background for a report
to be given to the court
prior to sentencing,
Brandstrader argued. But
Assistant State’s Attorney
Bolling Haxall said Saliu
had no right to challenge
the sentence at the local
court level because the time
limit on such actions had
lapsed. In addition, Haxall
argued, people who flee the
jurisdiction are waiving
their right to participate
in the preparation of a
presentence report. Booras
agreed with Haxall, and said
Saliu would be transferred
from Lake County jail to the
state prison system without
further delay.
MEN FACE GAMBLING CHARGES
POLICE SAY OWNER, EMPLOYEE
OF SMOKE SHOP WERE PAYING
CASH TO SLOT MACHINE PLAYERS
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal
Affairs Writer March
24, 2006
The
owner of Famous Cigarette
Outlet in Mundelein and an
employee face gambling
charges after being
arrested this week for
paying cash to players of
these electronic slot
machines in the store.
The machines were
confiscated by authorities. Police
said Thursday that some
customers of a Mundelein
discount cigarette store
were coming in for more than
a carton of smokes and a
disposable lighter. Lake
County Assistant State's
Attorney Dan Shanes said the
owner of Famous Cigarette
Outlet and one of his
employees
face gambling-related
charges, for paying cash to
players of a slot machine in
the store.
Agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group joined Mundelein
police Wednesday evening in
seizing the machine and
taking both men into
custody. Soyab Kagadawala,
48, and Mohammed Rheman, 44,
are charged with conspiracy
to commit gambling, and face
up to five years in prison.
Shanes said an undercover
MEG agent went into the
store at 815 S. Lake St. on
three occasions this month,
and each time put $20 into a
Cherry Monster electronic
slot machine in the store.
The agent played the machine
for a short time on each
visit, Shanes said, then
announced he was finished
and received cash from
Rheman, of 1544 N. Hoffman
Ave., Park Ridge. The
payments were based on the
amount of credits the agent
had accumulated while
playing, Shanes said, and
averaged about 20 cents per
credit. Both Rheman and
store owner Kagadawala, of
314 Orchard St., Mundelein,
were at the store around 7
p.m. when police arrived.
They appeared before
Associate Judge Valerie
Ceckowski for a bond hearing
Thursday morning, and were
released on signature bonds.
Both are scheduled to appear
in court April 13.
OFFICERS SAY THEY DISCOVERED
METH LAB
By Tony Gordon Daily
Herald Legal Affairs Writer
November 01, 2005
Lake County officials say
they averted a potential
disaster when they shut down
a methamphetamine laboratory
in a Libertyville townhouse.
Scott Erb, 38, was arrested
Saturday when agents of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group caught him
dumping waste products from
the production of the drug
in a garbage container on
Red Top Drive. The following
day, police in hazardous
material suits entered Erb’s
residence at 810 Braeman
Court and found more than a
pound of liquid
methamphetamine well-along
in the manufacturing
process, and materials to
make much more, officials
said. Lake County Assistant
State’s Attorney Daniel
Shanes said it is the
largest, most active source
of methamphetamine ever
discovered in Lake County.
What was of particular
concern to officials was its
location. The drug’s
production process involves
use of extremely volatile
chemicals, including
ephedrine and phosphorous,
and explosions are not
uncommon, Shanes said. It is
usually produced in rural
areas away from population
centers, in part, because of
the dangers involved. “One
of the most serious concerns
we have is the safety of the
immediate neighbors to these
types of operations,” he
said. “While dangerous
enough in rural areas, the
frightening aspect of this
lab was that it was in a
townhouse complex, where
neighbors share common
walls.” It was the
volatility of the chemicals
involved that brought police
attention to Erb, Shanes
said. The refuse company
that collects the garbage
from the container Erb was
dumping the waste in
reported small fires in
their trucks during the
compacting process, Shanes
said. Chemical experts from
the state police
Methamphetamine Response
Team tested the material and
determined methamphetamine
waste was the likely cause
of the ignitions, Shanes
said. MEG agents and
Libertyville police kept the
dumpster under surveillance
and arrested Erb around
10:30 a.m. Saturday when he
drove up and threw a bag of
garbage into the container.
Police said the bag
contained chemicals and
other by-products of the
drug manufacturing process.
Police also found two pipes
for smoking the drug inside
Erb’s car. The pound of
methamphetamine found inside
Erb’s townhouse has a street
value of up to $50,000,
Shanes said. Police also
found multiple boxes of cold
medicine, from which
ephedrine is extracted, and
more than 500 matchbooks
missing the striker plate.
Striker plates are commonly
used as a source of
phosphorous, Shanes said. A
40-caliber Glock
semiautomatic pistol was
found in the townhouse,
which Shanes said will
increase the penalties Erb
faces on the drug charges.
Erb is held on $800,000 bond
and is scheduled to appear
in court Wednesday. He is
charged with aggravated
possession of a controlled
substance, participation in
methamphetamine production,
possession of
methamphetamine precursors
and unlawful disposal of
methamphetamine waste.
Shanes said Erb faces up to
60 years in prison.
FUGITIVE IN DRUG CASE
ARRESTED IN BULGARIA
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
October 12, 2005
A
former Island Lake man who
walked away from his trial
on drug charges more than
two years ago is in police
custody in Bulgaria, a Lake
County prosecutor said
Tuesday. Besnick Saliu, 35
was arrested over the
weekend as he tried to cross
the border from Macedonia,
Assistant State;s Attorney
Matthew Hoffman said. Saliu,
the former owner of the
Island Cafe, disappeared
Aug. 1, 2003 at the end of
the first day of his tial
for selling a pound of
cocaine to undercover police
officers. The trial
continued in Saliu's
absence; he was convicted
and sentenced to 30 years in
prison tow months later. The
FBI issued a worldwide alert
for Saliu after his
disappearance, and Hoffman
said those efforts led to
his capture. Saliu was
orginally arrested after he
tried to sell the cocaine
for $14,500 to agents of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group in a
parking lot at routes 12 and
22 in Lake Zurich. Hoffman
said officials of the U.S.
Department of Justice's
Office of International
Affairs are in talks with
Bulgarian officials to
arrange for Saliu's return
to the United States. He
could not predict how long
it would take to get Saliu
back, but Hoffman said Saliu
will be held without bond
when he is returned.
POT BUSTS NET 781 POUNDS
MORE THAN $3 MILLION IN
DRUGS: BOND FOR FIVE
SUSPECTS SET AT $1 MILLION
EACH
By
Art Peterson
The News Sun Staff Writer
October 1, 2005
Five men, arrested in
two major drug busts of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, made
appearances Friday in Lake
County Circuit Court.
Associate Judge Valerie
Boettle Ceckowski set $1
million cash bonds Friday
afternoon for three men
arrested Thursday as they
loaded more than 300 pounds
of marijuana into their van
at a location in Lake
Zurich. That cannabis has a
street value of more than $1
million, said Daniel Shanes,
chief of the drug
prosecutions division in the
state's attorney's office.
On Friday morning, Judge
James Booras heard not
guilty pleas from two
Chicago men who allegedly
took delivery of 481 pounds
of marijuana in Lake
Barrington. That cannabis
has a street value estimated
at more than $2 million. MEG
agents had intercepted the
300 pounds, shipped by
commercial carrier from El
Paso, Texas, to a location
in Lake Zurich.
They arranged a contact with
the three men, who drove a
van from the
western suburbs of Chicago
to pick up the drugs. The
trio was arrested as they
were loading the van. Nabbed
were two brothers, Jesus
Loza, 40, of Cicero, and
Jose Loza, 50, of Berwyn,
along with their friend,
Julio Felix Ortega, 29, of
East Chicago, Ind. Each was
charged with cannabis
trafficking, which carries,
upon conviction, a sentence
of 12 to 60 years in prison,
and possession of cannabis
with intent to deliver,
which carries a sentence of
six to 30 years in prison.
Shanes said the two drug
busts are part of a MEG
operation focusing on large
trafficking of marijuana.
The men arrested "are part
of an interstate narcotics
trafficking group," he
added. The drugs were
destined for Lake County and
other parts of the Chicago
region, Shanes said.
SWEEP NETS $19,000 IN DRUGS;
TWO SUBURBAN MEN CHARGED
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
April
23, 2005
The Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group said
Friday it arrested two men
and seized $19,000 worth of
drugs after a month-long
investigation. MEG Director
Mark Rasmussen said
Christopher J. Knauf, 29,
and Justin G. Cairus, 26,
both face multiple charges
after their Wednesday night
arrests. Rasmussen said
Lindenhurst police provided
his agency with information
about possible drug activity
at Knauf’s home at 2002 Burr
Oak Lane, Lindenhurst.
Agents arrived at the house
with a search warrant about
6 p.m., Rasmussen said, and
found one pound of cocaine
and one pound of marijuana
inside. The cocaine is worth
$15,000 on the street,
Rasmussen said, and the
marijuana could fetch
$2,000. Agents then took a
search warrant to Cairus’
residence at 37370 N.
Cremona, Lake Villa, where
another pound of marijuana
was discovered. Rasmussen
said drug paraphernalia was
found in both houses. Knauf
is charged with unlawful
possession of and intent to
deliver cocaine, unlawful
possession of and intent to
deliver marijuana, and
possession of drug
paraphernalia. Cairus is
charged with unlawful
possession of, and intent to
deliver, marijuana and
possession of drug
paraphernalia. Assistant
State’s Attorney Dan Shanes
said bond is set at $500,000
for Knauf and $5,000 for
Cairus. Knauf is due in
court Monday, while Cairus’
next court date is May 17.
Shanes said Knauf faces up
to 30 years in prison if
convicted; Cairus faces a
maximum penalty of seven
years.
TIP LEADS POLICE TO
MARIJUANA ‘GROW HOUSE’
By Tony Gordon April 16,
2005
A tip to Lake County
CrimeStoppers led police to
a pair of Waukegan houses
used for nothing other than
the growing of marijuana,
and more than $1 million in
drugs and weapons, police
said Friday.
Michael W. Mattes, 52, of
1903 Camp McDonald Road in
Mount Prospect, is charged
with multiple felonies after
police raided the houses and
his personal residence. Lake
County CrimeStoppers
Director Andy Anderson said
his agency received a tip
about a “grow house” in
Waukegan about 5 p.m.
Wednesday.
Anderson said the caller
told CrimeStoppers a house
at 12442 Atlantic Ave. was
unoccupied and unfurnished
and had been rented
specifically for the purpose
of growing marijuana.
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group agents, as
well as investigators from
the federal Drug Enforcement
Administration and Internal
Revenue Service, went to the
house about 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
 |
|
Vincent
Pierri/Daily
Herald
|
|
 |
Lake County assistant
state’s attorney Dan Shanes
said the agents could smell
marijuana from outside the
house and took Mattes into
custody when he drove up in
a car he parked in the
driveway. Mattes had a
loaded .38-caliber revolver
in his possession when he
encountered police, Shanes
said. Mattes is barred from
possessing weapons in this
state because of felony drug
convictions in 1976 in
DuPage County and 1979 in
Cook County. Police
said he consented to a
search of the home and they
found 81 marijuana plants
growing in a sophisticated
irrigation and lighting
system and 93.4 pounds of
processed marijuana in a
plastic garbage bag. A
.22-caliber rifle and a
12-gauge shotgun also were
found in the home, Shanes
said. Mattes then
agreed to allow police to
search his Mount Prospect
home, Shanes said, and they
discovered another 19.7
pounds of marijuana and a
12-gauge shotgun there.
About 7:30 a.m. Thursday,
Mattes led police to a
second grow house he rented
in Waukegan at 2050 Walnut
St. Once there, Shanes said
police found 500 marijuana
plants growing and a third
12-gauge shotgun. Using a
state police formula for
calculating the street value
of drugs, the marijuana and
the plants are worth between
$1.16 million and $2.55
million.
Shanes said Mattes is
charged with multiple counts
of manufacture of marijuana,
possession of marijuana,
possession of marijuana
plants and unlawful use of a
weapon by a felon. Mattes
faces a potential prison
sentence of more than
100 years if convicted of
all counts. Shanes
said the investigation of
Mattes’ activities remains
open and police are
attempting to determine if
others were involved.
Mattes is being held on $1
million bond and is due to
appear in court Tuesday.
U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk said the
arrest by the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group will add fuel to the
fire in the House to
continue funding for such
law enforcement groups in
Illinois. “This is the type
of action that justifies the
funding of the Byrne grants,
which provides the financial
basis for MEG units in
Illinois,” Kirk said. “The
president is suggesting that
Byrne money be combined with
other law enforcement
funding, but those of us in
Congress are committed to
keeping the MEG units in
operation.”
LINDENHURST MAN CHARGED WITH
SELLING DRUG TO OFFICER
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer March 3, 2005
A Lindenhurst man was
ordered held on $1.5 million
bond Wednesday after being
charged with selling cocaine
with a loaded gun in his
pocket. Agents of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group arrested
James K. Swan, 27, at a
Libertyville hotel Tuesday
evening. Assistant State's
Attorney Dan Shanes said
Swan, of 2305 Honeysuckle
Court, is also charged with
three prior drug sales to
MEG agents.
Shanes said Swan agreed to
sell an undercover officer
2.2 pounds of cocaine for
$21,500 and set up a meeting
at the Holiday Inn Express,
77 Buckley Road. About 5
p.m. Tuesday, the officer
met with Swan at the hotel
and Swan handed over a
package containing tightly
compressed powder. He was
taken into custody and
police discovered a .22
caliber semiautomatic pistol
in his pocket with a round
loaded in the firing
chamber.
Swan was also wearing SAP
gloves, leather gloves with
compartments of powdered
lead covering the upper
finger areas that act the
same as brass knuckles. An
inspection of the package
Swan handed police showed
only the center of the
2.2-pound brick was actual
cocaine, Shanes said.
However, the criminal case
against Swan will deal with
the entire weight of the
package as a controlled
substance because state law
says "any substance
containing cocaine" is
cocaine. "The contents of
the package demonstrates
rather clearly that he
intended to rip the buyer
off," Shanes said. "We
believe the weapon and the
gloves indicate he was
willing to do so violently."
Police said Swan also sold
one-quarter ounce of cocaine
to MEG agents on Feb. 15 and
Feb. 17 and sold them a full
ounce on Feb. 22. Swan
served prison terms for
cocaine possession
convictions in 1998 and
2001, court documents show,
and was placed on probation
for the same crime in 1995.
Shanes said Swan is charged
with armed violence and
delivery of cocaine for the
most recent sale.
Armed violence is punishable
by a mandatory sentence of
between 15 and 30 years in
prison and delivery of
cocaine has a mandatory
sentence of between 15 and
60 years. The Feb. 22
delivery is punishable by a
sentence of between six and
30 years, while the Feb. 14
and Feb. 17 deliveries carry
four- to 15-year penalties.
Associate Judge Victoria
Martin scheduled a court
appearance for Swan on March
10.
POLICE RAID WAUKEGAN’CRACK
FACTORY’
TWO PEOPLE CHARGED IN WHAT
LAKE COUNTY OFFICIALS SAY
MAY BE THE LARGEST SEIZURE
IN THE STATE.
BY TONY GORDON Daily
Herald Legal Affairs Writer
July1, 2004
_______________________________________________
“Dealers generally do not
have that much crack cocaine
on hand at any one time.”
Dan Shanes, assistant
state’s attorney
_______________________________________________
Lake
County authorities believe
they have seized the largest
amount of crack cocaine in a
single raid in the history
of the state.
Agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group and Waukegan police
stormed a condominium in
Waukegan late Tuesday and
discovered what one official
described as a ‘crack
factory” .
Close to 2½ pounds of crack
cocaine, formed by cooking
powdered cocaine in a
mixture of other chemicals,
was discovered in the home
at 1655 Beach Road,
Assistant State’s Attorney
Dan Shanes said.
An additional five pounds of
powder cocaine, many
laboratory burners and
glassware and more than
$40,000 in cash hidden
inside a panel of an
interior door was also
found, Shanes said.
Brandy
Johnson, 25, who police said
lives in the condo, and
Jeffrey Collier, 33, of 2410
Cannel Blvd., were arrested
and charged with possession
of cocaine with the intent
to deliver. Shanes said the
amount of crack cocaine
seized was especially
significant because the drug
is usually prepared in much
smaller quantities. “Dealers
generally do not have that
much crack cocaine on hand
at any one time,” Shanes
said. “It is sold in small
quantities, so people
usually only prepare what is
needed to be sold over a
short period of time.”
Shanes said he and other
people familiar with the
case could not recall a
seizure of any amount
anywhere in Illinois
approaching what was taken
from the condo. The total
street value of the drugs
seized is between $500,000
and $750,000, Shanes said.
Police believe the crack
cocaine was prepared inside
the condo.
“Our officers are familiar
with what a standard
crackhouse looks like on the
inside,” Shanes said. “They
were telling me that this
was a crack factory.” The
investigation of Johnson and
Collier has been going on
for several months, he said.
Police say Johnson sold an
undercover agent seven grams
of powder cocaine April 19.
On June 1, police said a
second sale of seven grams
was made and said Johnson
sold an undercover agent an
ounce of cocaine late
Tuesday afternoon. Shanes
said Johnson was taken into
custody immediately after
the sale and a search
warrant was obtained for her
residence after the arrest.
Collier was arrested because
he was in the condo when
police arrived with the
search warrant, Shanes said,
and the drugs and cooking
materials were in plain
view. During the search of
the residence, police said
they found $40,766 in cash
hidden inside a panel of a
door and Coffler had an
additional $492 on him.
Associate Judge Victoria
Martin ordered both suspects
held on $250,000 bond after
a hearing Wednesday morning.
Shanes said both face
mandatory prison sentences
of between 15 and 60 years
if they are convicted of the
charges.
MAN GETS 30 YEARS IN COCAINE
STING
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer June 16, 2004
A Round Lake Beach man found
with more than 10 pounds of
cocaine in his home was
sentenced to 30 years in
prison Tuesday. Gregario
Castenada, 45, was arrested
Oct. 30 as he drove to a
meeting he had set up with
undercover agents of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group at which
he was to sell 1 ounce of
cocaine. Police found the
ounce in his car, and
Castenada gave them
permission to search the
house at 1603 Woodbine
Circle in which he had lived
for about three months with
two other men.
Cocaine was found in
cabinets, inside the walls
and in a five-gallon pasta
pot on top of the kitchen
refrigerator, Assistant
State's Attorney Matt
Hoffman said. All together,
more than 10 pounds of the
drug was confiscated, which
Hoffman said would have sold
for between $1 million and
$1.5 million. Castenada
claimed he was only running
an errand for the other men
in the house, who fled
shortly after Castenada was
arrested, and had nothing to
do with drug dealing or the
huge stash. "I was a guest
in that house, and the drugs
in the car they had given me
to deliver," Castenada told
Circuit Judge James Booras.
"I had no idea that the
drugs were in the house."
Hoffman rejected that claim.
He said the undercover
agents who set up the 1
ounce deal dealt strictly
with Castenada, and it would
have been impossible for
anyone living in the house
not to know the drugs were
there. "There was the smell
of cocaine throughout the
house; it was hidden
everywhere inside of it,"
Hoffman said. "He was living
in a house built of
cocaine." Defense attorney
Mark Curran of Waukegan
argued Castenada should get
a sentence on the low end of
the 15-year to 60-year range
he was facing in keeping
with his role in the obvious
drug organization. "This man
was a mule for others,
others who should have been
prosecuted themselves,"
Curran said. "He had no
extravagant lifestyle, no
bank accounts and no fancy
cars."
But Booras said even if
Castenada's claim he agreed
to deliver the ounce because
he was unemployed and needed
money was true, it was not
an excuse. "There are many
people who are out of work
these days, Mr. Castenada,"
Booras said, "and they do
not move massive amounts of
drugs to poison other
people's children."
Castenada was convicted
after a two-day trial in
March by a jury that
deliberated for about one
hour before reaching the
guilty verdict.
Major sting drug buy nets
two
Delivery, possession
charges: $5M bond for Skokie
man
By Art Peterson
Staff Writer The News Sun
March 26, 2004
Bond was set at $5 million
Thursday in Lake County
Circuit Court for a Skokie
man arrested in Deerfield
after a major sting buy of
Ecstasy pills by the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, along
with the Deerfield Police
Department and other law
enforcement agencies. Hien
Van La, 29, was charged with
three counts of unlawful
delivery, a Class X offense,
and three counts of unlawful
possession, a Class One
offense. Associate Judge
Victoria Martin set bond at
$500,000, for another man,
Virasack Z. Phoxay, a
26-year-old Chicago
resident, who law
enforcement officials
indicate was an alleged
lookout. Phoxay is charged
with one count each of
delivery and possession.
Additional charges of
trafficking are likely,
indicated Daniel Shanes,
chief of the drug
prosecutions division of the
Lake County State's
Attorney's office, if
evidence proves that the
pills were brought in from
out-of-state. Van La was
arrested at 5:35 p.m.
Wednesday, in the parking
lot of the Cadwell Corners
strip mall, at 57 N.
Waukegan Road, Deerfield. He
allegedly delivered 5,000
Ecstasy pills to an
undercover Lake County MEG
agent. In two prior sales in
the Highland Park area, Van
La allegedly had sold the
agent 400 pills, according
to MEG spokesmen. The agent
paid a total of $40,000 for
the three transactions. Each
pill has a street value of
$35, according to MEG
spokesmen, and the triple
buy has a street value of
$189,000. The arrests capped
a two-month-long
investigation which also
involved the Illinois State
Police, the FBI, the DuPage
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group and the
Riverwoods Police
Department. The
investigation was part of
the State Police "Project X"
initiative, a law
enforcement program that
targets drug dealers selling
"club drugs" such as
Ecstasy. While Van La was
making the actual drug deal,
Shanes said Phoxay was
driving around the strip
mall parking lot as the two
men stayed in communication
with each other via cell
phones. Phoxay has no prior
convictions, but he has had
prior arrests in Chicago and
Cook County, Shanes said,
and has forfeited bond and
required bench warrants.
Phoxay is a foreign-born
U.S. citizen, Shanes added.
The total amount of the
pills qualifies as a Class
Super X offense, Shanes
indicated. A conviction
would bring a sentence of 15
to 60 years in prison. If
evidence proves an
out-of-state source for the
pills, a trafficking charge
could double the sentence to
30 to 120 years in prison,
Shanes added. Although Van
La said he is unemployed,
Shanes said he has funds,
including state money from
drug stings which was traced
to his bank account. Van La,
who was born in North
Vietnam, has had prior
arrests for drug offenses
but no convictions, Shanes
said. "He is not now charged
with trafficking," Shanes
said, but evidence indicates
"he got pills from other
states. He is a flight risk
and needs a bond of several
million dollars." Martin set
bond at $5 million "based on
the hand-to-hand contact" of
Van La in the alleged drug
deal. She set a hearing for
status of attorney on April
2. Shanes recommended a $2
million bond for Phoxay.
Attorney Richard Quinn
recommended a lower amount,
saying Phoxay has a
5-year-old son, no gang
affiliation, and "has no
reason to flee. His car was
searched and they found
nothing." Martin said "the
defendant's position is that
he was just in the wrong
place at the wrong time. The
evidence may prove
otherwise. The request is
high, I'll set a reasonable
bond." Quinn said Phoxay's
family could raise up to
$20,000, but not
immediately. Martin set bond
at least temporarily at
$500,000, and scheduled a
hearing for further bond
review for Phoxay on
Tuesday. Both men, if they
post bond, must follow a
24-hour curfew, with release
from home only for work,
school or to see an
attorney, and they can have
no contact with each other,
Martin said. Until and if
bond is posted, the two will
be kept in separate portions
of the Lake County Jail in
Waukegan.
Drug sting snares 5,000
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer March 26, 2004
Two men are charged with
attempting the largest-ever
single sale of Ecstasy to
undercover Lake County
police.
Assistant State's Attorney
Daniel Shanes said Hieu Van
La, 29, of Skokie and
Virasack Z. Phoxay, 26, of
Chicago were arrested
Wednesday afternoon by
agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group.
Shanes said La, of 9433
Kolmar Ave., agreed to sell
5,000 pills of the powerful
hallucinogen to a
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group agent for $40,000.
"These drugs have a street
value of at least $200,000,"
Shanes said. "We consider it
very fortunate that law
enforcement was able to keep
this noxious poison out of
the hands of potential
consumers." The deal was set
for 5:30 p.m. in a parking
lot at Lake-Cook and
Waukegan roads in Deerfield,
Shanes said. Metropolitan
Enforcement Group agents in
unmarked cars set up
surveillance on the lot
about 30 minutes before the
scheduled buy. Police
observed Phoxay, of 5041 N.
Lowell Ave., as he arrived
and drove slowly around the
lot before pulling into a
parking space. La then
arrived, Shanes said, parked
his car and walked to the
car containing the
undercover officer. When La
handed the agent the package
containing the club drug
pills, Shanes said, that
officer activated a radio
signal to alert the other
officers to make the
arrests. The undercover
officer's car and the
vehicle Phoxay was in were
surrounded by police, and
both men were taken into
custody without incident.
The pair had been under
investigation for about two
months, Shanes said. At a
hearing Thursday, Associate
Judge Victoria Martin set
bond for La at $5 million
and ordered Phoxay held on
$500,000 bond. She scheduled
another court appearance for
Phoxay on Tuesday, and said
La should return to court
April 2. Both face a
mandatory prison sentence of
15 to 60 years if convicted.
Before Wednesday's arrests,
the previous largest
attempted Ecstasy
transaction in the county
was in July 2003 when two
men were charged with
attempting to sell 1,000
doses of the drug in Buffalo
Grove.
Igor Naydenov, 28, and
Gennady Shklyar, 29, of 1504
E. Jane Ave., Arlington
Heights, have pleaded
innocent to delivery of a
controlled substance and are
awaiting trial.
Face Charges Of Selling
Ecstasy
Daily Herald July 12,
2003
BUFFALO GROVE --
Two men who sold more than
1,000 Ecstasy pills to
undercover police officers
in Buffalo Grove were
arrested on drug charges
late Thursday, authorities
said. Gennady Shklyar, 28,
of the 1500 block of East
Jane Avenue in Arlington
Heights and Igor Naydenor,
27, of Lake Zurich were both
charged with unlawful
delivery of a controlled
substance and unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance, police said
Friday. Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group and other agencies
joined Buffalo Grove police
in the sting. The two men
were arrested outside a bar
in the 300 block of McHenry
Road, police said. Police
estimated the street value
of the seized club-drug
tablets at $36,550.
2 Arrested In Buffalo Grove
Ecstasy Sting
By Dave Orrick
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer July 13, 2003
At least one of two suburban
men arrested in a drug sting
last week in Buffalo Grove
remained jailed Saturday,
police and a relative said.
The two men were charged
with trying to sell more
than 1,000 pills of the club
drug Ecstasy - with an
estimated street value of
$36,550 to undercover
officers Thursday outside a
business on Route 83, north
of Lake Cook Road, according
to Buffalo Grove police. The
sting was the result of a
several-week investigation
by agents from the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group assisted
by officers from
Buffalo Grove, Vernon Hills,
Illinois state police, Lake
County sheriff's department,
the regional North Central
Narcotics Task Force and the
U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency, police said. Gennady
Skylar, 28, of 1504 E. Jane
Ave., Arlington Heights, was
ordered held on $200,000
bond Friday, his mother
said. Police listed
her family's name as
Shklyar. The suspect's
mother said she didn't think
her son was involved, but
she declined to comment
further. Igor Naydenor, 27,
of Lake Zurich, also was
arrested, police said.
Neither he nor his family
could be reached for
comment. Each is charged
with unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance and
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
241 drug-filled balloons
removed from suspect
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
May 10, 2001
Lake County officials
believe Sean Kucharski's
problems are the result of
something he ate. His
troubles come in the form of
a grand jury indictment
issued Wednesday charging
the 29-year-old Crystal Lake
man with drug trafficking
and possession of a
controlled substance.
What Kucharski ate was 241
small balloons filled with
Ecstasy pills, which were
surgically removed from his
system as a police officer
watched in the operating
room.
The pills are an illegal,
but nonetheless popular,
drug among teens on the club
scene.
Assistant State's Attorney
Mathew Chancey said
Kucharski, of 395 Poplar
St., was arrested April 26
on the charges, which carry
a mandatory prison sentence
of between six and 30 years
if convicted of the charges
and is presently free on
$25,000 bond. Mark Piccoli,
deputy director of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, said
Kucharski traveled to
Amsterdam, Holland, in March
and bought the drugs. He
loaded between 800 and 900
of the pills, each of which
are slightly smaller than an
aspirin, into the balloons
and swallowed them before
returning to this area in
late March, police said. The
balloons became lodged in
Kucharski's colon, Piccoli
said, and he became ill when
he could not expel them from
his body.
"The drugs weighed about a
pound and it is our
understanding that he was in
some severe pain,"
Piccoli said. "About the
same time, we received
confidential information
about what may be happening
with him and started an
investigation." Kucharski
was taken to Good Shepherd
Hospital in Barrington at
about 5 a.m. on March 29,
and Piccoli said MEG agents
arrived at the hospital
about five hours later. The
agents were told that
Kucharski was not responding
to the laxatives he had been
given, and if the blockage
did not leave his body
naturally it would have to
be surgically removed
because his blood pressure
was dropping. "We basically
said that we wanted whatever
it was that was in there,"
Piccoli said. "And after
consultations between the
Lake County state's
attorney's office and
attorneys for the hospital,
a search warrant for the
operating room was drafted
and approved by a judge."
Piccoli said the search
warrant allowed MEG Agent
Tim Gretz, scrubbed and
dressed in surgical
garb, to stand next to Dr.
Gia Compagnoni during the
operation that removed the
balloons from Kucharski's
system.
"We have to insure that the
chain of custody of the
evidence is pure and
unbroken," Piccoli said. "So
Tim went into the operating
room, was there when the
drugs came out and will be
prepared to testify to that
in court." Piccoli said
police allowed Kucharski a
reasonable amount of time to
recover from the surgery
before taking him into
custody. He posted 10
percent of a $250,000 bond
to gain his release from the
Lake County jail. A
spokeswoman for Good
Shepherd said neither the
hospital nor Compagnoni
would comment on the case.
Kucharski, who is scheduled
to be arraigned May 16
before Circuit Judge Raymond
McKoski, could not be
reached for comment. Piccoli
said the drugs have a street
value of $45,000 and the
case is another example of
the growing popularity of
Ecstasy. "It is frightening
to see that someone would go
to this length -- actually
putting his life at risk --
to bring this stuff into the
country," Piccoli said. "Not
only could he have developed
serious medical problems
from what actually happened,
if one of those balloons had
broken open inside of him it
could have been disastrous."
Surgery: Agent present to
collect evidence.
Hospital trips balloon into
drug charges
Smuggled from Amsterdam:
Police say pair swallowed
balloons containing 1,700
pills
By Chris Brenner
Staff Writer The News Sun
May 10, 2001
A Cary man and a McHenry
woman became violently ill
and were hospitalized after
swallowing hundreds of
balloons containing the drug
Ecstasy in Amsterdam,
Netherlands, police said
Wednesday.
Sean Kucharski, 28, of Cary
is being held in the Lake
County Jail, and Charlotte
Cox, 42, of McHenry is in
the McHenry County Jail,
according to Sgt. Michael
Myhre of the North Central
Narcotics Task Force in
Algonquin.
The investigation and
subsequent arrests were made
last month by the narcotics
force and the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, Myhre said. Kucharski
is accused of swallowing 231
balloons containing 1,155
Ecstasy pills, a designer
drug, while Cox is accused
of swallowing 96 balloons
with 545 Ecstasy pills,
Myhre said. Both became ill
March 28 at Cox's residence
in the 500 block of Mineral
Springs Road, Myhre said.
Cox was admitted to Northern
Illinois Medical Center in
McHenry and Kucharski to
Good Shepherd Hospital in
Lake Barrington. Myhre said
medical personnel at the
McHenry hospital notified
McHenry police of the drugs,
and that agency notified the
North Central and MEG
groups. Cox and Kucharski
were hospitalized for about
10 days, he said. Both
suspects were charged with
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance with
intent to deliver, criminal
drug conspiracy, unlawful
controlled substance
trafficking and unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance. Formal charges
were made on April 20, Myhre
said.
He said announcement of the
arrests was delayed to allow
the gathering of evidence
and information. He said
U.S. Customs officials are
also interested in the case.
Gun buy-back program nets
over 200
weapons
By Gwen H. Jader
Daily Herald Correspondent
December 16, 2001
The Lake County Sheriff's
Office collected more than
200 firearms Saturday in the
county's first gun buy back
program. Guns were collected
at the "Old" Mundelein Fire
Department building and
police department offices in
Round Lake Beach, Lake
Forest, Lake Zurich and
Waukegan. "It's much busier
than we anticipated. We've
been very busy at each
location," said Mark
Piccoli, the Deputy Director
of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group. Officers also made
house calls, for
participants who were
concerned about handling
loaded guns or who couldn't
drive. "There's a story
behind every gun. There's
always history behind a
weapon," said Sergeant Kent
Perkins of the Kildeer
Police Department. He and
Lake Zurich police officer
Scott Frost collected two
rifles and a handgun from a
home in Lake Zurich's Old
Mill Grove community.
Resident Jerry Gagnon was
happy to dispose of three
guns. Two had been left to
him by his father and one
had been left in an
apartment owned by his
grandfather. "These have
been sitting in the corner
for 25 years. It's something
that you don't want to have,
yet you don't know how to
dispose of properly," Gagnon
said. Widows returned guns
owned by their deceased
spouses. Veterans brought in
45-caliber pistols and
service revolvers. Former
hunters turned in hunting
rifles. Dennis and Muriel
Olenik drove to Lake Zurich
from Arlington Heights to
bring in a 12-gauge shotgun
that Dennis had hunted with
years ago when they lived in
central Illinois.
"This is a hunting weapon
that I had before the days
of permits. It's probably a
collector's item. This a
great program because this
is something that you don't
know how to get rid of
properly," he said.
Participants received a $50
gift certificate, redeemable
at local stores and
restaurants, for each gun.
They also received a stuffed
animal. "We're providing an
outlet for people, primarily
an older crowd, who want to
dispose of guns safely,"
said Rodney Chesser, Lake
Zurich Commander, Criminal
Investigations Division. The
buy back continues from 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. today.
Getting rid of guns
By Harold G. Downs
Daily Herald Staff Writer
December 03, 2002
Gun owners wanting to
dispose of unwanted guns and
ammunition are urged to do
so during Lake County's
second gun buyback program.
The program is from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturday at police
locations in Waukegan,
Mundelein, Round Lake
Park/Hainesville, Gurnee,
Lake Forest, Lake Zurich,
Grayslake, Vernon Hills,
Buffalo Grove and Highland
Park. People who turn in
unwanted functioning
firearms receive a $50 gift
certificate to a food or
department store per weapon
and a stuffed animal, with a
gift certificate limit of
$200 per person. Pellet and
BB guns and nonfunctional
weapons can be redeemed for
stuffed animals. All guns
and accessories will be
destroyed. The program is
coordinated by the Lake
County Sheriff's Office in
cooperation with the Lake
County Chiefs of Police
Association, Lake County
Crime Stoppers, Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group and local law
enforcement agencies. Police
ask participants to follow
these guidelines: • Guns
should be unloaded and in a
gun case or bag and
transported in the trunk of
the car or nonaccessible
area of a van or pickup
truck. • When arriving at
the turn-in site, enter
without the firearm and ask
a uniformed officer about
turning in the firearm. The
officer will accompany the
participant back to the
vehicle and retrieve the
weapon. • Those unfamiliar
or uncomfortable with
handling or unloading
firearms safely or who need
a ride to a turn-in site can
call the sheriff's office or
local police department and
an officer will travel to
the home to assist. • An
officer will retrieve a
firearm from a home if a
person is unable to leave.
The officer will complete
the paperwork and return
with the $50 gift
certificate and stuffed
animal. Last year's program
collected 408 firearms and
distributed $20,000 in
certificates over two days
in its first year. The
number of weapons turned in
at any one site ranged from
99 in Mundelein to 68 in
Lake Zurich. Lake Zurich
Police Chief William Urry
noted the gift certificates
and stuffed animals give gun
owners an incentive to turn
in their unwanted weapons
during the program, rather
than just turning them in
for disposal at local police
departments as some do. "The
whole idea is to get the
weapon out of the house,"
Urry said. "We're targeting
people who have no real use
for the weapon." Urry, who
is also president of the
Lake County Chiefs of Police
Association, noted the
program may not occur every
year, depending on what this
year's results yield. The
program is occurring only
one day this year compared
to last year's two days, but
more turn-in sites were
added this year, Urry said.
Lake County Sheriff's Police
cited the following
statistics from the Brady
Campaign to Prevent Gun
Violence. • There are about
192 million privately owned
firearms in the United
States, 65 million being
handguns. • There were
30,708 firearm-related
deaths in the U.S. in 1998,
57 percent being suicides,
39 percent murders, 3
percent accidents and 1
percent unknown. • Gunshot
wounds were the second
leading cause of death and
injury for children and
young people 10 and 24 years
old, with the leading cause
motor vehicle accidents.
Lake County Sheriff Gary Del
Re noted the program's
purpose is not to deter
private gun ownership but
allow citizens to dispose of
unwanted firearms,
accessories and ammunition.
"By conducting such
operations, law enforcement
enables the community to
play an active role in
getting unwanted guns off
the street and out of the
hands of potential
wrongdoers by reducing the
number of firearms in
circulation," Del Re said.
FOX LAKE WOMAN, 2 MEN
CHARGED
IN ATTEMPTED SALE OF LSD TO
OFFICER
By Rummana Hussain
Chicago Tribune
November 3, 2000
Two Chicago-area men and a
Canadian woman have been
charged in connection with
an alleged LSD drug ring in
Fox Lake. The Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group seized 5,500 doses of
LSD Oct.25 in a Jewel Food
parking lot in Fox
Lake.Scott E. Wozniak, 23,
of Cicero, Anthony J. Soto,
24 of Carol Stream, and
Jessica L. Morrison 23, of
Ontario, Canada, were
arrested when they allegedly
attempted to sell some of
the drugs to an undercover
officer, said Kevin Grampo,
a group supervisor.
All three were charged with
possession of a controlled
substance and delivery of a
controlled substance, Grampo
said, They were being held
in Lake County Jail, he
said. The street value of
the seized LSD is about
$30,000, he said.
Four charged with selling
'coke' at fast-food
restaurant
By Dave Orrick
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
December 08, 2002
In what suburban officials
say is one of the most
brazen drug operations
they've seen, four Lake
County residents were jailed
Saturday on charges they ran
a cocaine ring and sold the
product "to go" from the
drive-through window of a
Mundelein Burger King. More
than nine months of
surveillance of the alleged
operation culminated Friday
night when authorities made
a whopper of an undercover
buy - one kilo of coke with
an estimated street value of
$300,000 - from the eatery's
night manager, his wife and
two former employees,
authorities said Saturday.
"It was obviously going on
every day," Mundelein Chief
Raymond Rose said of the
operation, which drew drug
users and possibly dealers
from throughout the Chicago
region to the fast-food
franchise on Midlothian Road
south of Route 60/83.
According to Mundelein
police and the anti-drug
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, here's
how it worked: Employees
stashed various quantities
of cocaine in clear plastic
bags next to coffee
creamers, milk and
condiments in small
refrigerators in the
drive-through window area.
"Customers" either phoned
orders ahead or asked for
certain employees at the
drive-up ordering kiosk.
Without using code words,
they specified an amount of
cocaine over the microphone,
pulled around to the window
and paid the
dealer-employee, who handed
over the drugs in a Burger
King paper bag.
Mundelein Sgt. Nick Poulos
said quantities routinely
sold that police documented
ranged from less than a gram
to more
than
an ounce. Friday night's
kilogram deal went down in
the parking lot, police say.
Throughout the course of the
investigation, authorities
were unable to reach the
owner of the franchise,
Poulos said.
Restaurant night manager
Fabian Guzman, 21, his wife
Niesha Molina, 24, his
brother Raul Guzman, 20, all
of 55 Shadow Lane in
Mundelein, as well as
Ricardo Sanchez, 36, of the
first block of North
Ridgemoor Avenue in
Mundelein, were being held
in Lake County jail Saturday
after a judge ordered each
held on $750,000 bond.
Each is charged with
criminal drug conspiracy, a
"super Class X" felony that
carries a sentence range of
12 to 60 years in prison if
convicted, as well as
delivery and possession of a
controlled substance.
Fabian
Guzman worked the 4
p.m.-to-close shift as
recently as Friday night,
police said. Raul Guzman and
Sanchez worked there until
several months ago, when
they were both fired for
unrelated reasons.
Terry Lemming, director of
Lake County MEG, and Rose
said the investigation isn't
over, and more arrests are
likely. Police first got
wind of the alleged
operation more than a year
ago and began regular
surveillance nine months
ago, they said. Over that
time, Rose said "hundreds"
of drive-through deals were
observed, with customers
ranging from casual users to
suspected dealers. Police
declined to elaborate on
evidence amassed by the
surveillance.
Rose and Lemming also said
other employees who may have
known about the dealing and
done nothing are being
scrutinized. A manager
reached at the restaurant
Saturday, who only
identified herself as
"Cindy" said, "No one in
this store had any knowledge
of this happening." Lemming
added that handling
potentially deadly drugs
next to food creates a
potential public health
hazard. "When this guy
touches cocaine, you think
he washes his hands?" he
said. •Daily Herald staff
writer Russell Lissau
contributed to this report.
Charged: Authorities say
others employees under
scrutiny
Police: Workers at Mundelein
Burger King sold cocaine
Associated Press
December 09, 2002
Customers at a Mundelein
Burger King could order some
cocaine with their Whoppers
and fries, authorities say.
Members of a drug ring
working at the restaurant
stashed various quantities
of cocaine in plastic bags
near milk, condiments and
coffee creamers in a small
refrigerator in the
drive-through window area,
according to Mundelein
police and the anti-drug
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. Customers
would either phone before
they came to pick up their
orders or ask that
particular employees serve
them, police said. Upon
arrival, customers would
then request drugs over the
eatery's drive-though
microphone, pull around to
the window and receive their
cocaine in a Burger King
paper bag, authorities said.
Mundelein Police Chief
Raymond Rose said the
operation attracted drug
users and perhaps drug
dealers from throughout the
Chicago area and that police
witnessed "hundreds" of
drive-through deals. "It was
obviously going on every
day," he said. Members of
the alleged drug ring were
arrested after an undercover
officer bought, in the
restaurant's parking lot,
one kilo of cocaine with a
street value of about
$300,000, police said.
Arrested Friday night on
criminal drug conspiracy
charges were the
restaurant's night manager,
Fabian Guzman, 21; his wife,
Niesha Molina, 24; his
brother, Raul Guzman, 20;
and Ricardo Sanchez, 36.
Police said Raul Guzman and
Sanchez worked at the
restaurant until they were
fired several months ago. On
Saturday a Lake County judge
ordered each of the
Mundelein residents held on
$750,000 bond. The arrests
came after police had the
restaurant under
surveillance for more than
nine months, authorities
said. People would purchase
anywhere from a gram to more
than an ounce at the
drive-thru window, Mundelein
Sgt. Nick Poulos said.
Friday night's sale to
police, authorities said,
took place in the parking
lot. Criminal drug
conspiracy is a felony that
carries a sentence of 12 to
60 years in prison. The four
also are charged with
delivery and possession of a
controlled substance.
Authorities say an
investigation continues into
whether other employees knew
about the drug dealing.
3 plead guilty to selling
drugs at restaurant
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
April 08, 2003
Three of the four people
accused of running a cocaine
sales operation from a
Mundelein fast-food
restaurant pleaded guilty
Monday in Lake County
Circuit Court. The four were
arrested Dec. 7 after a
months-long sting by agents
of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group ended with the sale of
more than two pounds of the
drug with an estimated value
of $30,000. Fabian Guzman,
22, the night manager of the
Burger King at 712 S.
Midlothian Road, was taken
into custody after police
said he accepted $25,000 for
the kilogram package of
cocaine during a meeting in
the restaurant parking lot.
Guzman, his wife, Neisha
Molina, 24, and his brother,
Raul Guzman, 21, all of whom
lived at 55 Shadow Lane,
Mundelein, were arrested at
the scene of the sale, as
was Ricardo Sanchez, 26, of
21 N. Ridgemoor Ave.,
Mundelein. Assistant State's
Attorney Amy Meister Falbe
said both Guzmans and
Sanchez were restaurant
employees. They made dozens
of smaller-quantity sales to
undercover agents in the
months leading up to the
major deal, authorities
said. On the night of the
arrests, Fabian Guzman was
meeting with an undercover
agent in the agent's car in
the restaurant parking lot,
authorities said. Molina and
Raul Guzman waited in a car
across the street. Sanchez
walked up to the car Molina
and Raul Guzman occupied,
took a plastic bag from the
back seat and walked across
the street and handed the
bag to Fabian Guzman, Falbe
said. All four were charged
with delivery of cocaine and
face up to 60 years if
convicted after a trial.
They have been in the Lake
County jail on $750,000 bond
since their arrests. Monday,
prosecutors offered Fabian
Guzman a prison sentence of
20 years if he agrees to
plead guilty. He is
scheduled to appear in court
Friday to announce his
decision. Sanchez pleaded
guilty and was sentenced to
nine years in prison. Molina
pleaded guilty in exchange
for 4¨ years behind bars.
Raul Guzman, who prosecutors
said played the smallest
role in all of the ring's
operations, pleaded guilty
and was sentenced to six
years in prison. That
sentence will be put on
hold, however, and Raul
Guzman will be turned over
to the Department of
Immigration and
Naturalization Service for
immediate deportation to his
native Mexico. Falbe said
Raul Guzman will be forced
to serve the prison sentence
only if he returns to this
country and is arrested. If
that happens, he will also
be subject to a mandatory
10-year federal prison term
for re-entering the country
after being deported. She
said the other three
defendants are also illegal
immigrants and are likely to
be deported after they have
served their prison terms.
Man charged in fast food
drug case pleads guilty
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
April 24, 2003
The man police say was the
force behind a drug
operation based at a
Mundelein fast food
restaurant was sentenced to
20 years in prison
Wednesday. Fabian Guzman,
22, avoided a sentence of as
many as 60 years by pleading
guilty to delivery of
cocaine and accepting the
20-year term negotiated with
prosecutions. Guzman was the
night manager of the Burger
King at 712 S. Midlothian
Road. He was arrested Dec. 7
after a months-long
investigation by the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. Guzman,
his wife, Neshia Molina, 24,
and his brother, Raul
Guzman, 21, all of 55 Shadow
Lane, Mundelein, were
charged in the case, along
with Ricardo Sanchez, 26, of
21 N. Ridgemoor Ave.,
Mundelein. Assistant State's
Attorney Amy Meister Falbe
said both Guzmans and
Sanchez were restaurant
employees. They made dozens
of sales to undercover
agents during the
investigation, including
some at the restaurant's
drive-through window, Falbe
said. On the night of the
arrests, Fabian Guzman met
with an undercover agent in
the agent's car in the
restaurant parking lot.
Molina and Raul Guzman
waited in a car across the
street. Sanchez walked up to
that car, took a black
plastic bag from the back
seat, walked across the
street and handed the bag to
Fabian Guzman. All four were
arrested when Fabian Guzman
accepted a $25,000 payment
for the cocaine from the
agent. Police said the
cocaine had a street value
of more than $100,000. All
four illegal immigrants were
charged with delivery of a
controlled substance.
Sanchez, Molina and Raul
Guzman pleaded guilty during
separate hearings April 7.
Sanchez was sentenced to
nine years in prison and
Molina got 4¨ years. Raul
Guzman received six years in
prison, but his sentence was
put on hold in favor of
immediate deportation to his
native Mexico. Falbe said
the other three face
deportation after they serve
their prison terms. Raul
Guzman will have to serve
his sentence if he returns
to this country.
county cracks down on
ecstasy
BY MIKE LAROSE STAFF
WRITER PIONEER PRESS
GRAYSLAKE REVIEW
August 02, 2001
Since police officers first
noticed ecstasy in Lake
County four years ago, it
has spread like a disease
among grade school to
college-age youth. “If this
had been a disease, the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention would have
been out in force,” said
Terry Lemming, director of
the Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. Though
not classified as a disease,
use of ecstasy has been
found to be dangerous, and
sometimes deadly. Efforts to
keep ecstasy out of the
county, and to increase
awareness of parents,
schools and youth about the
presence and dangers of the
drug, have been led by the
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, which includes
undercover officers from 28
law enforcement agencies.
Officers run sting
operations to catch ecstasy
dealers, make presentations
at schools and provide
information on the group’s
Web site
www.lakecountymeg.org.
“We at LCMEG decided to do
something more because this
ecstasy problem is so bad,”
Lemming said. The problem
went from 0 to 60 in four
years. Last year, Lemming’s
group made about 60 arrests
involving ecstasy. He
anticipates that the
popularity of the drug will
continue to grow.
In April, undercover
officers seized 3,000
ecstasy pills and made four
arrests in a sting operation
in Gurnee. The seizure was
said to be the largest ever
in Lake County, with a
street value of about
$120,000.
Sheriff Gary Del Re is also
concerned about the growing
popularity of the so-called
“club drug.”
Parents play a critical
role, he said, and need to
make sure they know where
their children are on
weekends, and what they’re
doing. Although ecstasy is
associated with all-night
“rave” parties that attract
teenagers, it can often be
found wherever teenagers
gather. In May 2000, at a
rave party at the Antioch
Country Club, undercover
officers purchased ecstasy
from three different people
at the party. Dangerous drug
And teenage ecstasy users
don’t realize how dangerous
the drug is. “I think
there’s a tendency of
teenagers to play down the
risk of this drug,” Del Re
said. Education is a good
approach, because despite
efforts to stem the flow of
drugs into the United
States, interdiction efforts
only succeed in stopping 15
to 20 percent of the drugs
from Mexico, said Del Re.
Drug enforcement shouldn’t
even be called a “War on
Drugs,” because of that
small percentage, he said.
“It’s a catch phrase. It’s a
buzz word that makes people
feel good,” he said.
About 90 percent of the
ecstasy distributed in the
United States comes from
Europe, said Lemming. It’s
easier to conceal and
smuggle than some other
narcotics because it’s
odorless. Officers have had
to learn about the
characteristics of the drug,
which present different
challenges than other
illegal drugs.
“It’s a new drug and we’re
still learning how to fight
it,” Lemming said.
Possession of ecstasy is a
felony, and convicted
offenders can receive
probation, or up to three
years in prison. Most
first-time offenders are
sentenced to probation and
mandatory drug treatment,
said Daniel Shanes,
supervisor of the Drug
Prosecutions Division of the
Lake County State’s
Attorney. “Our emphasis on
first-time offenders who
have drug problems is to try
to put them on probation, to
get them in a treatment
program, to get them off the
drug,” Shanes said. Cocaine
remains the predominate drug
in Lake County, but ecstasy
is becoming more widely
available, and is often sold
by dealers who sell cocaine
and other drugs, he said.
When a dealer is caught
selling cocaine and ecstasy,
he would be prosecuted on
the cocaine charge, a
higher-level offense.
Ecstasy bill But a
bill before the state
legislature could change
that. The bill would bring
ecstasy up to the same
offense schedule as cocaine
and heroin. There were more
than 400 arrests in Lake
County involving cocaine
last year, said Shanes.
Ecstasy is also known as
MDMA, an abbreviation for
its chemical name
(3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine).
It is a stimulant with mild
hallucinogenic properties,
originally developed and
patented by the
pharmaceutical company
Merck, according to the
National Institute on Drug
Abuse. It was developed in
Germany in 1912, for unknown
uses. MDMA became illegal in
the United States in 1985.
It is commonly taken orally
in tablet or capsule form,
though it is sometimes sold
in powder form, and can be
snorted or smoked. The user
feels the effects within one
hour, and the effects last
from three to six hours.
Physical effects while under
the influence include
increased blood pressure,
heart rate and body
temperature. Muscle tension,
involuntary teeth clenching,
nausea and blurred vision
may also be experienced. Use
sometimes results in heart
failure or stroke. Ecstasy
affects brain serotonin
levels, giving the user a
feeling of peace, enhanced
pleasure and emotional
connection with others. It
is sometimes called the “hug
drug.”
Short-term effects of use
include confusion,
depression, sleep problems
and severe anxiety. Studies
have shown long-lasting
damage to brain cells
containing serotonin in
heavy users of ecstasy.
Memory and motor skills may
also be altered. Certain
behaviors can sometimes
indicate ecstasy use, such
as staying out all night,
irritability and inability
to sleep. Users will often
carry baby pacifiers (for
teeth clenching), and
fluorescent light sticks for
enhancing the visual
experience. No deaths have
been attributed to ecstasy
use in Lake County, but
Lemming said there have been
deaths from the drug in
McHenry and DuPage counties.
DuPage County experienced a
growth in ecstasy use before
Lake County, he said. But
it’s hard to gauge the exact
magnitude of the problem.
“It’s a lot worse than we
think right now,” Lemming
said.
Drug ring leader gets 12
years
106 pounds of marijuana
By Art Peterson Staff
Writer The News Sun
November 11, 2002
MEG agents closed in at
Deerfield hotel lot. A man
described as the leader of a
six-man ring who brought 106
pounds of marijuana to Lake
County pleaded guilty Friday
in Lake County Circuit Court
to drug trafficking. He was
sentenced to 12 years in
prison. Edgar A. Llanes, 32,
will also likely be deported
to Mexico, after serving his
prison sentence in Illinois,
said Daniel Shanes, chief of
the drug prosecution
division of the state's
attorney's office. Llanes,
represented by attorney Jed
Stone, entered a negotiated
guilty plea to marijuana
trafficking, a Super Class
One offense. Aside from the
negotiations, the charge
carries a sentencing range
of eight to 30 years. The
original charge was a Super
X offense, which carries a
penalty of 12 to 60 years in
prison. "We're very happy
with the negotiations.
Twelve years was
appropriate. It is the most
of any of the defendants who
have pleaded guilty thus
far. His role was the source
of supply," said Julio
Argueta, assistant state's
attorney. Hidden microphones
recorded Llanes stating,
both in California and in
Lake County, that he had the
marijuana and intended to
sell it, Shanes said. Llanes
hired others to drive the
drugs — packaged in 26
plastic-wrapped "bricks" —
from California to Illinois
while Llanes flew here to
complete the sale, Shanes
said. The marijuana, which
police believe was grown in
Mexico, had a street value
of $400,000 to $500,000,
Shanes said. "It was enough
to get hundreds of school
children in Lake County
hooked on pot."
Five of the men were
arrested in late March in
the parking lot of a
Deerfield hotel by
investigators of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. The sixth
person was arrested later in
California and brought to
Lake County. Three of the
men have already pleaded
guilty and been sentenced;
two others still await
trial.
Rodrigo P. Gomez, 28,
pleaded to a Super Class One
charge and a negotiated
10-year sentence. Both Adam
Flores, 21, and Edwin
Gonzalez, 18, pleaded to
Class One charges and
negotiated six-year
sentences. Walter T. Ruiz,
20, and Sergio B. Quintero,
23, await trial. All are San
Diego residents, except for
Quintero, a resident of
Rowland Heights, Calif. Ruiz
also maintains a residence
in Tijuana, Mexico.
FOOTBALL PLAYER INDICTED ON
DRUG CHARGES
Round Lake man:
MEG team seizes 1.5 pounds
of marijuana, $10,000
By Chris Brenner
Staff Writer The News Sun
March 1, 2001
A Round Lake man who was in
the running to be a
quarterback for an Arena
League football team in
Chicago was indicted on drug
charges Wednesday in Lake
County.Also indicted were a
North Chicago woman and a
Waukegan man on robbery
charges, said Jim Simonian,
an assistant Lake County
state’s attorney.
Adam Teach, 27, was indicted
on one count of possession
with intent to deliver
marijuana and one count of
unlawful possession of
marijuana.At the time of
arrest, Tesch had in his
possession arrest 1.5 pounds
of marijuana —with an
estimated street value of
$1,500 and $10,000 in cash,
Simonian said.
Tesch played for the Lake
County Vikings semipro
football team for three
years in the 1990s. In
mid-February, he
participated in a
quarterback tryout for the
Chicago Rush, a new
franchise in the Arena
League.
Tesch was arrested Feb. 15
at his home in the 700 block
of North Petite Road by Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group agents,
Simonian said. There they
confiscated the marijuana
and the money.
If convicted, he faces three
to seven years in prison,
Simonian said.Teach was
released from custody after
posting 10 percent of a
$50,000 bond. He will be
arraigned March 13 before
Lake County Circuit Court
Judge Mary Schostok in
Circuit Court in Waukegan.
Island Lake man convicted of
drug offense in his absence
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
August 01, 2003
A Lake County jury convicted
an Island Lake man Thursday
of selling a pound of
cocaine to undercover police
officers nearly three years
ago. However, Besnick Saliu,
33, was not around to hear
the bad news because he
failed to return to court
after the first day of
testimony in his trial
Wednesday. Circuit Judge
James Booras issued an
arrest warrant calling for
Saliu to be held without
bond. The prosecutor in the
case fears Saliu may try to
flee the country, if he has
not already done so.
Assistant State's Attorney
Matthew Hoffman said Saliu
is fluent in six languages
and vacationed in Macedonia
a little more than two weeks
ago.
The cocaine case against
Saliu has been pending since
his Nov. 8, 2000, arrest.
Hoffman said he believes
Saliu panicked when he
realized there would be no
more continuances of the
trial.
"He was sitting in the
chair, evidence was being
presented and the fingers
were being pointed at him,"
Hoffman said. "I believe the
fantasy world he had been
living in broke apart, and
he finally figured out he
was going to be held
accountable for what he
did." Waukegan defense
attorney Lou Pissios said he
had no idea where his client
was and declined to comment
further. Saliu and two other
men were selling a pound of
cocaine for $14,500 in a
parking lot at routes 12 and
22 when their customers
revealed themselves to be
agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group. Saliu, whose last
known address was 3324
Greenwich Lane in Island
Lake, was at the time the
owner of the Island Cafe at
310 E. State St. Ricardo
Sanchez, 22, an employee of
the cafe, and Rene Gonzalez,
22, who lived with Sanchez
in Wauconda, accompanied
Saliu to the meeting where
the cocaine was to be sold.
After meeting with the
undercover agents, Saliu
opened the glove box of his
1992 Ford Taurus and handed
agents the brick of cocaine.
All three were arrested, and
agents later found an
additional 4¨ ounces of
cocaine at the restaurant.
Gonzalez pleaded guilty to
possession of cocaine Feb.
23, 2001. She was sentenced
to six months in jail and
two years on probation.
Sanchez, who drove Saliu's
car to the drug sale, was
sentenced to 10 years in
prison June 4, 2002.
Saliu faces up to 40 years
in prison after his
conviction Thursday. His
sentencing is set for Sept.
12.
Hoffman said he is working
with the FBI to set up a
world-wide dragnet for
Saliu.
Lake Zurich man faces felony
charges after police stop
By Harold G. Downs
Daily Herald Staff Writer
May 23, 2001
A 34-year-old Lake Zurich
man faces felony drug
charges after cocaine and
marijuana were found at his
home, police said. Fidel
Hernandez, 157 Robertson
Ave., was arrested at 2:30
p.m. May 17 on charges of
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance and
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance with
intent to deliver, Lake
Zurich Commander Rodney
Chesser said. Hernandez also
was charged with unlawful
possession of cannabis,
unlawful possession of
cannabis with intent to
deliver, unlawful hidden
compartments within a
vehicle and improper use of
registration, police said.
Hernandez was initially
stopped in Lake Zurich when
police were alerted by
Chicago police and United
States Customs Service
officials that his vehicle
was suspected of carrying
contraband, Chesser said.
The vehicle was stopped by
all three agencies and two
large bags containing
undisclosed amounts of
marijuana were found in a
hidden compartment, police
said.
A subsequent investigation
of Hernandez's home, with
assistance from a Lake
County sheriff's police
canine unit, turned up about
25 pounds of marijuana,
about 2 pounds of cocaine
and more than $17,000,
Chesser said. Hernandez was
taken to the Lake County
jail. He posted $7,500 bond
on Sunday and was turned
over to the Immigration and
Naturalization Service due
to his "immigration status,"
Chesser said.
Police are working with Lake
County's Metropolitan
Enforcement Group to
investigate other leads the
case has presented. A court
date was not available.
Hernandez could not be
reached for comment Tuesday.
Man receives three-year
sentence
for growing marijuana at
home
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer April 06, 2002
A Lindenhurst man called an
"industrialist" for the
elaborate marijuana system
he constructed in his home
was sentenced to three years
in jail Friday. Lanny
Adleman, 38, will be allowed
to leave jail only to work
and attend drug and
psychological counseling.
Agents of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group raided Adleman's
former home at 300
Robincrest Lane in March of
last year and found it had,
in large part, been
converted to an indoor
marijuana plantation. Agent
Chad Roszkowiak testified
there was a hydroponic
growing system, in which
plants are grown in water
rather than soil, in use on
all three floors of the
home.
Sophisticated lighting
systems mounted on tracks to
simulate the effect of the
sun on the plants cast an
amber glow from windows in
the house that was visible
from surveillance positions
police used during the
investigation, Roszkowiak
said. Close to 200 plants in
every stage of development -
from seedlings to several
feet tall - were found in
the house. Adleman kept
records indicating he
expected 11 harvests per
year, police said. The
plants were not producing
common marijuana, Roszkowiak
said, but a high-potency
strain known as "Cali Bud"
or "Dank" that sells for as
much as $5,000 per pound,
close to five times the
price of lower-grade
marijuana. "The man was an
industrialist with the
system he created for
himself," Assistant State's
Attorney Karen Lentz said.
"A significant terrin the
Department of Corrections is
warranted to deter others
from similar activity."
Defense attorney Stephen
Scheller said that Adleman
should be given a chance at
probation in order to
continue the drug treatment
program he began shortly
after his arrest. "You have
to look at not only the
crime but the man himself,"
Scheller said. "He has had
significant problems and has
used marijuana on a daily
basis since he was 15 years
old." Adleman told Associate
Judge Victoria Rossetti he
had lost the house and the
real estate business he
started because of his
arrest but considered
himself fortunate.
"I have had a chance to stop
smoking marijuana through my
treatment," Adleman said.
"My whole outlook on life
has changed and I am looking
forward to living drug
free." Rossetti's sentence
also requires Adleman to
serve a four-year term of
probation, including
submitting to random drug
testing and to perform 250
hours of community service.
Operation Early Bird
Nineteen Arrested Around
County In Warrant Sweep

THOMAS DELANY JR. / STAFF
PHOTOGRAPHER Lake County
Sheriff's Deputy Darlene
Rivera searches Sheila
Peasand of Zion during
Operation Early Bird,
conducted Friday by the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. Peasant
was charged with unlawful
possession of drug
paraphernalia.
By Chris Brenner Staff
Writer
Saturday, December 02, 2000
More than 60 law-enforcement
officers Friday arrested 19
people in Lake County who
were wanted on outstanding
arrest warrants, most of
them on drug charges.
Operation Early Bird was an
organized and cooperative
effort by federal, state,
county and local
law-enforcement officers to
locate and apprehend drug
law fugitives, said
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group Deputy Director Mark
Piccoli. "We arrested some
people who have been
fugitives from the judicial
system for quite some time,"
Piccoli said. "Many of those
arrested face lengthy prison
terms, which is one of the
reasons these offenders have
chosen to evade the justice
system." Lake County Sheriff
Gary Del Re and Lake County
State's Attorney Michael
Waller assisted in
coordinating the warrant
sweep. Del Re said the sweep
was the seventh similar
operation, adding the sweeps
"have consistently resulted
in removing wanted persons
from the streets of Lake
County." Waller noted: "Our
efforts against drug dealers
continue from investigation
to assuring fugitives are
brought to justice." Piccoli
said those fugitives
arrested Friday "have made
the decision not to accept
responsibility for their
actions and instead ignore
the justice system. Our goal
is to get these fugitives
before the court to answer
to their charges." Sgt. Bert
Foster, Lake County
Sheriff's Department
Warrants Division
supervisor, said the warrant
sweeps will continue
unannounced in Lake County.
"We will target those
offenders who continue to
break the law and attempt to
avoid the system, he said.
Lake County Law enforcement
agencies participating in
the sweep included Fox Lake,
Grayslake, Lake Zurich,
Libertyville, Mundelein,
Buffalo Grove, Antioch,
Waukegan, Round Lake Beach,
Round Lake Park, Round Lake
Heights, Park City, Vernon
Hills, Lake Villa, Highland
Park, Wauconda, Tower Lakes,
Hawthorn Woods,
Lincolnshire, Deerfield and
Winthrop Harbor. Also, the
Lake County Sheriff's
Department, the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, the Internal Revenue
Service, Illinois State
Police, Federal Bureau of
Investigation and DuPage
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, .
Arrested were:
Pedro Munoz, 28, Waukegan,
unlawful possession of
marijuana.
Erasto Guadarrama, 36,
Waukegan, unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance.
Mario Garcia, 22, Waukegan,
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
Jaylen Nix, 21, North
Chicago, unlawful possession
of a controlled substance.
Melinda Snow, 26, Waukegan,
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
Sheila Peasand, 39, Zion,
unlawful possession of drug
equipment.
Heriberto Cortez, 20,
Waukegan, unlawful
possession of marijuana.
Larry Morrical, 32, Zion,
unlawful possession of drug
equipment.
Richard Moore, 23, Round
Lake Beach, unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance.
Leonard Casey, 47, Zion,
unlawful possession of
marijuana.
Cesar Carillo, 27, Waukegan,
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
Charles Patton, 23, Zion,
unlawful possession of
marijuana.
George Taylor, 42, Zion,
unlawful possession of drug
equipment.
Danielle Zito, 22, Vernon
Hills, unlawful possession
of marijuana.
Lawrence Hailey, 22, North
Chicago, unlawful possession
of marijuana.
Roger Johnson, 42, Park
City, unlawful possession of
marijuana.
Edward Towers, 28, North
Chicago, domestic battery.
Nicholas Nave, 29, Wauconda,
traffic.
Geovanni Gomez, 27, Lake
Zurich, unlawful possession
of marijuana.
LAKE COUNTY FUGITIVES GET
POLICE WAKE-UP CALL
By John Flink Chicago
Tribune
December 2, 2000
An early morning
police sweep Friday
targeting people wanted on
warrants for drug-related
charges resulted in the
arrest of 19
people. Officers from the
Lake County sheriff's
office, the Metropolitan
Enforcement Group and 25
local, state and federal
law-enforcement agencies,
made the arrests as part of
Operation Early Bird.
More than 60 officers set
out from the sheriff's
Waukegan headquarters at 5
a.m. Friday. The hour was
chosen because of the higher
probability of finding
people at home, authorities
said. Several arrests were
made while the fugitives
were on the job. Additional
arrests are expected next
week, authorities said.
Officers approached the
individuals' homes in groups
of four to six. Each group
of officers generally
included representatives
from local, state and
federal agencies. The sweep
"once again demonstrates the
high level of cooperation
and teamwork between the
various Lake County law
enforcement agencies," Lake
County Sheriff Gary Del Re
said. "This is the seventh
time we have conducted
operations of this nature,
and these warrant sweeps
have consistently resulted
in removing wanted persons
from the streets of Lake
County."
Periodic sweeps to track
down fugitives are one of
the most effective tools
available to authorities to
stay on top of the continual
flow of warrants issued by
the Lake County state's
attorney's office, Del Re
said.
Most of the 12,000 or so
warrants typically in force
in Lake County are for
relatively minor offenses.
If someone forgets to show
up in court for a traffic
offense, a warrant will be
generated. But some, like
those targeted in Friday's
sweep, are for more serious
charges, such as drug
violations. Seventeen
of Friday's arrests were for
drug-related charges. The
other two arrested--one for
a traffic offense and one
for a domestic battery
charge--happened to be
caught in the net,
authorities said. "This
sweep went well, and nobody
put up any resistance," said
Lake County Sgt. Bert
Foster, who coordinated the
sweep. "One woman, the
mother of a girl we arrested
in Vernon Hills, was
outraged that we brought so
many officers to arrest her
daughter. She said that her
daughter is a nice girl, but
we don't know that. We have
a job to do and we have to
do it safely."
People wanted on warrants
can be difficult to find
because they tend to move
around, officials said.
Sometimes officers are able
to arrest them at their
places of employment, which
can be embarrassing and
provide a powerful incentive
to heed their next calls to
court, Foster said.
Surrenders are common in the
days following sweeps
because word gets around
that police are on the
prowl.
Lake County Warrant Sweep
Rounds Up 19 Drug Fugitives
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Staff Writer
December 02, 2000
The Grinch carried a
badge on Friday.
The holiday plans of 19
fugitives, sought mainly on
drug crimes, were disrupted
with arrests by teams of
officers from almost every
Lake County police
department and two federal
agencies. Dubbed "Operation
Early Bird," the warrant
sweep, coordinated by the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group and Lake
County sheriff's office, was
aimed at suspects who had
been released on bond, then
failed to appear in court.
"These are people who
committed offenses then made
conscious decisions to
ignore the judicial system,"
MEG Deputy Director Mark
Piccoli said. "Our goal is
to find them and return them
to the system."
Just after 5 a.m., more than
65 officers divided into
teams of five and spread
throughout the county in
search of 70 fugitives
wanted for failing to appear
in court this year and in
1999. One team, comprised of
MEG Special Agent Chris
Thompson, FBI Agents Daniel
McCune and Michael
Biegalski, Hawthorn Woods
Patrolman Armondo Escamilla
and Lincolnshire Patrolman
T.J. Beale, found the early
going rough. A woman at a
house in North Chicago said
the person being sought
lived there at one time but
no longer did. The
grandparents of a second
fugitive in Waukegan said he
had moved to California. And
on and on and on.
"It is always a gamble when
you are seeking someone on a
warrant, especially on drug
charges," Thompson said.
"These people change
addresses like most people
change clothes." Erasto
Guadarrama was at least one
address change short because
he opened the door to the
house at 3100 Ezekiel Ave.
in Zion where police had
been told to find him.
Piccoli said Guadarrama, 36,
has been wanted since last
March when he missed a court
appearance for possession of
cocaine and was ordered held
on $15,000 bond after his
arrest.
Some people sought in the
warrant sweep ended up
having their legal woes
multiply. Jaylen Nix, 21, of
2841 18th St. in North
Chicago, was already facing
a misdemeanor charge of
possession of marijuana when
he missed a court date in
July. When police located
him at the Buffalo Grove
electronics firm where he
works, they say Nix had
about 10 grams of marijuana
in his pocket and a new
misdemeanor charge of
possession was added to his
file. His bond was set at
$5,000. Sgt. Bert Foster,
head of the warrants
division of the Lake County
Sheriff's office, said the
warrants served Friday come
from a stockpile dating to
1979 between 13,000 and
14,000 on a given day,
although many suspects have
multiple warrants waiting
for them.
Sheriff Gary Del Re said he
authorized the seventh
warrant sweep in the past
two years to go forward on
Friday in spite of recent
overcrowding problems at the
jail. "We were confident
that we would be able to
accommodate any and all
people picked up," Del Re
said. "The fact that we have
at times a crowded jail does
not mean we are not going to
take wanted criminals off
the streets."
police arrest wauconda man
after drug raid
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
June 28, 2001
A Wauconda man was arrested
Tuesday night after police
found 120 marijuana plants
and six ounces of
hallucinogenic mushrooms in
a search of his home,
officials said. Police also
said they confiscated
$12,740 in cash from Matthew
McKown, 25, during the raid
on his home at 27119
Anderson Road. Terry
Lemming, director of the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, said a
tip from a citizen led
police to get a search
warrant for McKown's home.
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group agents arrived at the
house about 9 p.m. Tuesday,
Lemming said, and discovered
the marijuana plants and
mushrooms containing the
drug psilocybin in the
basement. Police estimated
the value of the drugs at
about $150,000. Lemming said
the cash was confiscated
because it is believed to be
profits from drug sales.
Court records indicate
McKown served terms of court
supervision after
convictions for possession
of small amounts of
marijuana in 1993 and 1994.
Assistant State's Attorney
Daniel Shanes said McKown is
charged with possession of
marijuana with the intent to
deliver and unlawful
production of marijuana. He
could be sentenced to up to
15 years in prison if
convicted of the charges,
Shanes said. Associate Judge
Joseph Waldeck ordered
McKown held on $20,000 bond
and told him to appear in
court again July 13.
Police Confiscate Elaborate
Drug Setup
BY TONY GORDON
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
March 7, 2001
Police seized more than 200
pounds of marijuana and a
complex indoor growing
system Monday evening during
a raid on a home in
Lindenhurst. Mark Piccoli,
deputy director of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group, said
Lanny Adleman, 37, had 196
marijuana plants growing on
all three levels of his home
at 300 Robincrest Lane. The
plants were being cultivated
in a hydroponic growing
system — incorporating
high-intensity lights,
irrigation tubes and tubs —
Piccoli said was worth
several thousands of
dollars.
"It was without a doubt the
most sophisticated growing
system I have seen and it
was spread from the basement
to the second floor of the
house," Piccoli said. Agents
confiscated the plants,
which weighed about 1 pound
each, and another 11 pounds
of grown marijuana, which
was in the process of being
dried. Piccoli said. The
product is believed to be as
high-tech as the production.
Piccoli said the strain of
marijuana Adleman was
growing is known as
"California Bud "Cali Bud"
or "Dank." State police say
the extremely potent strain
is often sold for as much as
$10 a gram at the retail
level and can command a
price of between $4,000
and $6,000 per pound
wholesale, well above the
customary price of between
$1,200 and $1,600 for a
pound.
Estimates of the street
value of the drug range from
between $948,000 and $1.2
million, police said.
Piccoli said Metropolitan
Enforcement Group agents
have been investigating
reports of Adleman’s
activities for several
months and just recently
developed enough information
to secure a search warrant.
The warrant was served on
the residence with the
assistance of Lindenhurst
police about 6:30 p.m.
Monday, Piccoli said.
Adleman, who received
probation after a 1983
conviction for drug
possession, arrived at the
residence while police were
in the course of the search
and was taken into custody
without incident.
He appeared in court Tuesday
morning before Associate
Judge Joseph Waldeck,
charged with possession of
marijuana with the intent to
deliver and marijuana
cultivation. Waldeck
appointed the public
defender’s office to
represent Adleman. set his
bond at $75,000 and ordered
him to appear in court again
March
27. Assistant State’s
Attorney Ken LaRue said
Adleman faces a mandatory
prison sentence of between
six and 30 years if
convicted of the charges
against him. Public Defender
David Brodsky declined to
comment on the case.
Police destroy field full of
pot
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer September 07, 2002
Nearly $6.5 million worth of
marijuana was destroyed
earlier this week when Lake
County narcotics agents
found it growing in a field
near Wadsworth.

Police from the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group discovered 4,325 pot
plants growing in a field
north of Route 173 and east
of Route 41 about 11 a.m.
Thursday.
MEG supervisor Chad
Roszkowiak said most of the
crop was well on its way to
market.
"The plants ranged in height
from 1 foot to 8 feet tall,
with the greater majority of
them being approximately 6
feet," he said. "The plants
were mature and were
obviously being well taken
care of. They would have
soon been ready for
harvest."

MEG agents received a tip
the plants were growing in
the area, and cut them down
and burned them on the spot,
Roszkowiak said. They also
have information about who
may have planted and cared
for the plants, he said, and
are continuing their
investigation. Police
estimate each plant was
capable of producing
marijuana worth $1,500 on
the street, bringing the
total value of the find to
$6.48 million.
Assistant State's Attorney
Dan Shanes, chief of the
drug prosecution division,
said the seizure may
represent the largest single
confiscation of marijuana in
the county's history.
Sheriff Gary Del Re, whose
department is among the many
that contribute
investigators and funds to
MEG, praised the work that
led to the discovery.
"It is always a very good
day when police are able to
get drugs before they even
get to the street, and this
was a significant
interdiction," Del Re said.
"The work of MEG in this
case is another fine example
of how things happen when
police agencies pool their
resources and work toward a
common goal."
In wake of deaths, police
warn public of 'club drugs'
By Meta Levin
Daily Herald Correspondent
October 24, 2000
The presentation on "club
drugs" was an education for
Lake Forest resident Suzanne
Zimmerman. During
Monday's two-hour talk,
Zimmerman and other parents
learned about the popularity
of the drugs, their effects
and the dangers they pose to
users. "I'm going to
talk to my children and tell
them a few things I learned
today," Zimmerman vowed.
Co-sponsored by Lake
Forest-based LEAD (Leading
Edge Against Drugs) and
State Rep. Susan Garrett,
the program featured state
police from a task force on
illegal drugs, gangs and
weapons. The program was
organized, in part, as a
response to a discussion by
a group of parents about a
state bill designed to set
stronger penalties for
selling what are known as
"club," "rave," or
"designer" drugs.
There have been three recent
deaths in McHenry,
Naperville and Lisle tied to
the drugs, the crowd was
told by Illinois State
Police Master Sgt. Terry
Lemming, director of the
Lake County office of the
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, and Master Sgt. Mark
Henry from the DuPage County
office of the group.
Undercover officers from
Lemming's group arrested two
people accused of selling
these drugs at a Memorial
Day weekend "rave" party in
Antioch. Rave promoters bill
the parties as "alcohol
free," lulling parents into
thinking they are safe for
teens to attend, Lemming
said. "They usually
are alcohol free," he said.
"But the drugs are readily
available." The Metropolitan
Enforcement Group's Web site
at www.lakecountymeg.org
lists common drugs and
danger signs for which
parents can be on the
alert.Lemming and Henry
ticked off the most popular
drugs: Ecstasy, or MDMA,
which causes euphoria and
reduced inhibitions; PMA,
which is more popular than
Ecstasy and causes rapid
pulse and elevated body
temperature;
methamphetamines, or meth,
speed; and the old '60s
standby LSD, which causes
hallucinations. "These
substances are being taken
by kids who we don't
normally think of as
traditional drug users,"
said Micki Jones, LEAD
director. Zimmerman, who has
two teenage children, said
the presentation made her
concerned. While she doesn't
allow her children to go to
teen clubs, she knows of
other parents who do.
"They don't know where their
kids are or what they are
doing," she said. "That's
disturbing to me. The kids
trust other kids to tell
them what's safe."
Record Ecstasy seizure made;
four arrested
By Tony Gordon
Daily Herald Legal Affairs
Writer
April 15, 2001
Four people were arrested
late Friday night in what
authorities are calling the
largest seizure of the club
drug Ecstasy in Lake County
history. Terry Lemming
director of the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group, said more than 3,000
doses of the drug were
confiscated from the group’s
hotel room in Gurnee.
He said the drugs have a
street value of $120,000.
Lemming said Rusty Burgess,
27, of Blacksburg, S.C., and
Vichitra Prasongphine, 24,
of Kings Mountain, N.C., are
charged with drug possession
and armed violence after
both were caught with loaded
handguns. John Travis Queen,
24, of Kings Mountain, N.C.,
was charged with drug
possession and Kimberly
Bridges, 19, of Shelby,
N.C., was charged with
misdemeanor possession of
marijuana, Lemming said. MEG
agents met with Burgess and
Queen in the parking lot of
a fast-food restaurant near
Gurnee Mills around 8 p.m.
Friday to buy the drug in a
sale they had prearranged
through phone calls, Lemming
said. Both were taken into
custody before the
transaction was completed,
Lemming said, in part
because Burgess made it
known to the under cover
agents be was armed.
Agents then secured a search
warrant for their rooms at
the Holiday Inn at 6100
Grand Ave., Lemming said,
and discovered the drugs in
several plastic bags and
Prasongphine in possession
of another gun.
No Ecstasy was found in
Bridges’ room, but a small
amount of marijuana was
recovered. She was released
after posting $50 bond.
"These pills definitely
came from overseas, and we
suspect that is how four
people from coastal states
came to be in our area with
them," Lemming said. ‘They
can make a lot more money
selling them here then they
can at home. Burgess and
Prasongphine face mandatory
prison sentences of between
15 and 60 years if convicted
while Queen faces a term
between 12 and 60 years. All
three were ordered held on
$1 million bond.
Three Face Ecstacy Drug
Charges
3,000 hits: Out-of-Staters
arrested at McDonald's
By Chris Brenner
STAFF WRITER
April 17, 2001
GURNEE — Three suspects
charged with possession and
intended sale of more than
3,000 hits of the club drug
Ecstasy valued at about
$120,000 remain in the Lake
County Jail on $100,000
bonds, police said.
They, along with another
suspect who is charged with
unlawful possession of
cannabis, were arrested
Friday by agents of the Lake
County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group after an
undercover agent allegedly
purchased some Ecstasy from
two of them at the
McDonald's restaurant at
6380 Grand Ave., police
said.
Arrested at McDonald's were
Rusty Lee Burgess, 27, of
Blacksburg, S.C. and John
Queen, 24, of Kings
Mountain, N.C. Burgess is
charged with armed violence,
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance and
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance with
intent to deliver. Queen is
charged with unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance and unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance with intent to
deliver, according to
police. After the alleged
drug sale transaction, a
search of the suspects
yielded a loaded handgun and
a hotel key from a hotel in
the 6100 block of Grand
Avenue. Both men consented
to a search of the hotel
room where agents found more
than 1,500 grams of Ecstasy
and another loaded handgun.
Two women in the hotel room
were arrested. They are
Vichitra Prasongphine, 22,
of Kings Mountain, N.C. who
is charged with armed
violence, aggravated
unlawful use of a weapon and
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance. Also
arrested was Kimberly
Bridges, 20, of Shelby, N.C.
who was charged with
unlawful possession of
cannabis. She was released
from custody on a personal
recognizance bond, police
said.
If convicted on the Class X
felonies, Burgess, Queen and
Prasongphine all face six to
30 years in prison, police
said. MEG Director Terry
Lemming said the profit is
high in selling club drugs
and the four suspects were
probably in the area because
they can get more money for
the drug than if they sold
it in the Carolinas.
"They wouldn't tell us why
they were here," he said.
Ecstasy is known by its
chemical name as
3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine
(MDMA).
Searches in Waukegan yield
six illegal guns, one arrest
By Chris Brenner Staff
Writer The News Sun
August 20, 2000
WAUKEGAN — Police agencies
seized six illegal firearms
this week in two residences,
arrested one man and are
seeking at least one other
suspect, authorities
said. On Thursday, officers
from the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group and the Waukegan
Police Department executed a
search warrant at a
residence of a known gang
member in the 2300 block of
Chinook Road. On Tuesday,
the Waukegan Police
Department Neighborhood
Enforcement Team seized two
guns in a garage in the 500
block of South Avenue and
arrested one man, according
to Sgt. Jon Oliver,
commander of the
team. During the search of
the home on Chinook Road,
officers found four
firearms: a sawed-off
shotgun, an assault rifle, a
rifle and a pistol described
as a "Saturday night
special," said Terry Lemming
of the Lake County MEG.
Owners of the weapons were
not at home at the time of
the search. One person is
being sought by police.
There may be others as
evidence is developed,
Lemming said. Criminal
charges are pending.
"None of the weapons seized
has any practical sporting
or target shooting
applicability," said Master
Sgt. Mark Piccoli, deputy
director of Lake County MEG.
"These guns, especially the
shotgun and assault rifle,
typify the types of weapons
sought by gang members for
use in criminal activities."
Oliver said the gun seizure
on South Avenue resulted
from a tip to police that a
street gang was hiding
weapons in the garage there.
The homeowner, David Harris,
64, gave written permission
for police to search the
garage, Oliver said.
Harris was later arrested on
gun charges after police
found a sawed-off shotgun
and a semiautomatic 9 mm
handgun in the garage.
Harris was charged with
unlawful possession of a
weapon by a felon and
failure to have a firearm's
owner identification card,
Oliver said.
Three arrested in drug
investigation
By Chris Brenner Staff
Writer The News Sun
October 21, 2000
WHEELING — Three Wheeling
men were arrested Thursday
after police seized nearly
two kilograms of cocaine
with a street value of more
than $600,000, police said.
The arrest ended a one-month
investigation that began in
Mundelein by the Lake County
Metropolitan Enforcement
Group and the Mundelein and
Wheeling police departments.
Arrested were Luis Ocampo,
24, Romano Florez, 34, and
Roberto Diaz, 22, all of the
600 block of Wayne Avenue,
Wheeling. Police said the
investigation began after
Mundelein police received
information that Ocampo was
dealing cocaine in the
Mundelein area.
Undercover agents then began
purchasing cocaine from the
three men. The investigation
ended when Ocampo and Florez
delivered one kilogram of
cocaine to the agents,
police said. Diaz was
arrested after a search of
his residence uncovered four
ounces of cocaine, two
ounces of cannabis and
$4,800 in cash. Police also
searched the residence of
another suspect in the 800
block of McHenry Avenue
where 670 grams of cocaine
and $21,000 in cash were
seized. Charges for the 670
grams of cocaine are pending
further investigation,
police said.
According to police, a
vehicle owned by Ocampo was
also searched and 820 grams
of cannabis and 60 grams of
cocaine were uncovered.
In all, police said, nearly
two kilograms of cocaine
with a street value of more
than $600,000, more than
$26,000 in cash and numerous
amounts of drug
paraphernalia including
electronic scales were
seized. Ocampo was
charged with three counts of
unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance and
three counts of unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance. Florez was
charged with one count each
of unlawful delivery of a
controlled substance and
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
Diaz was charged with one
count of unlawful delivery
of a controlled substance,
one count of unlawful
possession of a controlled
substance with the intent to
deliver and two counts of
unlawful possession of a
controlled substance.
Two accused of having
$300,000 worth of drugs
By James D. Wolf Jr.
Daily Herald Staff Writer
August 01, 2001
A package of marijuana sent
from Arizona resulted in the
arrest of two Des Plaines
men Tuesday not only for the
package, but also marijuana,
cocaine, Ecstasy and two
guns found in their home,
police said. Des Plaines
police did not provide the
weight of the package they
said contained marijuana,
but said the total amount
seized was about 30 pounds.
Police estimated the street
value of all the drugs at
$300,000. Ted Ahn, 21, and
Admon Khoshaba, 27, both of
493 Leslie Court in Des
Plaines, each have been
charged with two counts of
possession of cannabis with
intent to deliver, two
counts of unlawful cannabis
trafficking, two counts of
possession of a controlled
substance with intent to
deliver, and two counts of
possession of drug
paraphernalia. They also
face a charge each of
possession of a controlled
substance for 12 Ecstasy
pills found in their
apartment, police said. Ahn
was arrested at 4:55 p.m.
after a Des Plaines tactical
officer posing as a Fed Ex
employee delivered the
package to the apartment,
police said. The package had
been intercepted in Tempe,
Ariz., and sent on to the
Lake County Metropolitan
Enforcement Group. Ahn
accepted delivery of the
package and was arrested.
When Khoshaba arrived home,
he was arrested. Police
searched the apartment and
found 120 grams of cocaine,
the 12 tablets of Ecstasy,
drug paraphernalia and two
firearms. They also found a
total of 30 pounds of
cannabis, police said. Both
men have an Aug. 28 court
date in Cook County circuit
court in Skokie. Des Plaines
police tactical unit members
worked with the Lake County
MEG agents and Tempe, Ariz.,
police on the bust.
|