Monday, October 28, 2013

The Infamous....James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond



by Ran Britt


Image result for jimmy henchman




Jimmy Henchman was born James J. Rosemond on February 5, 1965 in Brooklyn, New York. His parents Constantine and Andrea Frazier Rosemond's two-parent home also included James' brothers Mario, Kesner and Lionel and his sister Nadge.

Rosemond's criminal career began at the age of 16 when he was arrested for bike theft. That arrest resulted in his incarceration at Riker's Island in the C-74 juvenile detention center where he would meet other future career criminals such as Kelvin "50 Cent" Martin. While incarcerated together, Rosemond was known by the nickname "Ace" and Martin was given the name "Little Bastard". Years later, after Martin's death, Rosemond would pay for a $9,000 red granite monument to adorn the grave of his former fellow inmate. Less than two years later, Rosemond was charged with criminal possession of a firearm and three months after that arrest he was again charged with a weapons violation. This time, at 18 years old, he was also charged with robbery in the first degree as well as second degree murder. A year later, Rosemond earned his third charge for criminal possession of a firearm.

Eventually, Rosemond's criminal activity extended beyond his native New York when, in February of 1996, he was again charged with criminal possession of a firearm - this time in Los Angeles.

November 5 of the same year slain movie star and rapper, Tupac Shakur's first posthumous album, The Don Killuminat: The 7 Day Theory, was released amidst a fan frenzy and widespread media coverage - owing in no small part to the fact that Shakur had been murdered two months earlier. The album's final track, "Against All Odds", a song in which Shakur addresses his perceived enemies contains accusations that Rosemond was instrumentally involved in the actor's first shooting, which occurred two years earlier. During the incident, which occurred on the night of November 30, 1994, Shakur was confronted by two men wearing military fatigues upon entering the lobby of popular recording studio, Quad Studios. Shakur and his party, which included Randy "Stretch" Walker of the rap group the Live Squad and another man, were held up at gunpoint by the two assailants. Shakur was robbed of $40,000 worth of diamond and gold jewelry. During the robbery, Shakur was shot five times and pistol-whipped. He was wounded once in the hand and thigh, twice in the groin and twice in the head. On November 30, 1995, Walker was shot to death while driving in Queens, New York - exactly one year to the day after Shakur's shooting.
Rosemond and his son, James J. Rosemond, Jr.




In 2000, Rosemond was sentenced to 19 months in prison stemming for a conviction for a weapons violation.
Despite his lengthy arrest record, Rosemond was also an enormously successful music industry executive. Rosemond founded and headed Czar Entertainment, a management company that at one time or another was responsible for guiding the careers of actor Michael K. Williams and several prominent music performers including Brandy, The Game, Shyne, Too Short, Akon, Sean Kingston, Gucci Mane, Salt-N-Pepa, Trillville, Big Gipp (of Goodie Mob), Sheek Louch (of the Lox), Pleasure P. (of Pretty Ricky), Smitty and Yummy Bingham.

On January 21, 2005, Rosemond accompanied his then-client Jayceon "The Game" Taylor to an on-air interview with Richard "DJ Xzulu" Dunkerson of Lanham, Maryland radio station WKYS 93.9. Both Rosemond and Taylor were charged with second-degree assault following an attack on Dunkerson reportedly instigated by his teasing Rosemond about his bluetooth earpiece. While the charges against Taylor were dropped, in February 2006 Rosemond was sentenced to five years suspended and three years of probation following legal proceedings which reportedly included rapper Dana "Queen Latifah" Owens testifying as a character witness on Rosemond's behalf.

In early 2007, Rosemond's son, James Jabulani Rosemond, Jr. (14-years-old at the time) was allegedly slapped by rapper Marvin "Tony Yayo" Bernard and his associate and reputed member of the Bloods street gang Lowell "Lodi Mack" Fletcher. The alleged assault is widely believed to have been connected to the ongoing rap feud (at the time) between Bernard's rap group G-Unit and former member Jayceon "The Game" Taylor - owing to the fact that Taylor was professionally represented by Rosemond's Czar Entertainment. On March 24, Bernard was arrested and charged with assault for the incident. On April 18, 2007, the home of Bernard's mother was targeted in a drive-by shooting in what is believed to be retaliation for the assault of Rosemond's teenaged son. Dave Lighty, brother of late G-Unit manager Chris Lighty, was assaulted in a razor attack, Bernard's Bentley was shot at in Harlem and a bullet-proof vehicle belonging to G-Unit was torched as well in what authorities allege as further retaliation in the feud. In February of 2008, prosecutors dropped the charges against Bernard citing insufficient evidence. Fletcher meanwhile, was shot to death in the Bronx on September 27, 2009, in what authorities believe to be more retaliation for the alleged assault on Rosemond's son.

A 2010 article by Alison Gendar in the New York Daily News alleged that Rosemond had acted as a cooperating witness with authorities on more than one occasion. In 1996, while serving time for narcotics and weapons charges in North Carolina, Rosemond reportedly notified authorities that four of his fellow inmates had invited him to participate in a planned escape attempt. In 1997, Rosemond reportedly cooperated with authorities in order to gain leniency for bail-jumping charges back in New York. Allegedly, he described how staff members at the correctional facility in which he'd been detained altered official documents so that he could appear to post bail legally. Rosemond and his current attorney, Jeffrey Lichtman, who has also served as defense counsel for John Gotti, Jr., have since denied accusations that he ever acted as an informant and point out that he never signed a cooperation agreement. Lichtman has stated, "He met with [federal prosecutors] for a single session, but there are plenty of reasons people meet with prosecutors. His lawyer at the time inflated what happened in an attempt to get a better sentence, and it didn't work...The fact is that prosecutors later claimed he flat-out lied to them, and they weren't happy about it." 
        
Game and James "Jimmy Henchman" 
Rosemond




In June 2010, the DEA concluded it's investigation of Rosemond by issuing a warrant for his arrest on drug trafficking charges. After going into hiding for a month, Rosemond was trailed to the W hotel in Manhattan by authorities and arrested after a brief chase on foot during which he chipped a tooth after being wrestled to the ground by federal marshals.
On October 6, 2011, Rosemond's older brother, Kesnar Rosemond, was sentenced to 12 years for drug trafficking offenses connected to the organization headed by his younger brother.

In 2011, Dexter Isaac, a convicted felon sentenced to life for murder began cooperating with agents for the Drug Enforcement Agency and prosecutors investigating Rosemond for drug trafficking. Isaac, who is currently serving his life sentence at the Metropolitan Detention Center, Brooklyn, confessed to prosecutors that he was in fact the triggerman during Tupac Shakur's 1994 shooting. Isaac informed investigators that he and an accomplice perpetrated the robbery and shooting of Shakur at the behest of Rosemond for a $2500 cash payment and all of the jewelry on the rapper's person - save one of two diamond rings. According to Isaac, Rosemond wanted to present one of Shakur's diamonds to his longtime girlfriend, Cynthia Reed - albeit in a new setting. It's worth noting that by the time Isaac came forward, the statute of limitations for the crime had expired. 
  
In May 2012, Rosemond was put on trial for operating a multi-million, bi-coastal drug trafficking network following a lengthy investigation by federal and state agencies. Rosemond was represented in court by attorney Gerald Shargel, who also represented Mafia don John Gotti; John Gotti, Jr.; mobster Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano; actress Amanda Bynes; and James "Jimmy C" Coonan, leader of the Hell's Kitchen-based Irish-American organized crime organization, the Westies. During the trial, prosecutors asserted that Rosemond generated in excess of $11 million each year since 2007 in drug proceeds. Prosecutors alleged that Rosemond's organization routinely shipped narcotics concealed in packages covered in mustard to throw off drug-sniffing dogs, in music equipment cases from Los Angeles to New York City and in turn shipped the cash proceeds from cocaine sales back to California.

On June 5, 2012 Rosemond was found guilty on all 13 charges brought by prosecutors in his federal trial for drug trafficking. He was convicted of cocaine distribution, conspiracy, money laundering, witness tampering and criminal possession of a firearm. On June 22, Rosemond was formally charged with the  murder of Lowell "Lodi Mack" Fletcher.
On Friday, October 25, 2013, Rosemond was sentenced to life in prison in Brooklyn Federal Court. He was also ordered to forfeit cash and assets totaling $14 million.

In November 2013, it was revealed that a federal informant, listed as "CW-3" on federal documents to protect the witness' identity, confessed to being the triggerman behind the 2005 shooting of music mogul, Suge Knight. The informant told investigators that he shot Knight, head of the Death Row Records music label, on orders from Rosemond for a $10,000 payment. The informant stated that Rosemond personally supplied him with the gun used in the shooting and that the two of them fled the scene together immediately after the assault. At 12:42 a.m., August 28, 2005, Knight was shot once in the leg while seated at a table in the Red Room VIP section of the Shore Club in Miami Beach, Florida. Knight was in attendance as a guest at a party being hosted by rapper Kanye West in celebration of the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards held the following night. Witnesses at the party, who did not identify the shooter, stated that at least six shots were fired.

Rosemond's federal trial for the shooting death of Lowell "Lodi Mack" Fletcher began on February 10, 2014 and concluded March 4, 2014, resulting in a hung jury. Rosemond's retrial began December 2, 2014, at which United States attorney, Preet Bharara, presented 35 prosecution witnesses including former Rosemond associates Khalil Abdullah, Mohammed "Tef" Stewart and Brian "Slim" McCleod to testify against him. On December 11, 2014, he and co-defendant Rodney Johnson were convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and murder-for-hire. Rosemond was sentenced to life plus 20 years on March 23, 2015.

On November 1, 2016, the U.S. Court of Appeals' Second Circuit vacated Rosemond's March 2015 conviction for murder for hire. The appellate court cited that the district court (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York) "incorrectly applied the waiver provision in defendant's proffer agreement, and erred in precluding defense counsel from making certain arguments at trial."

On the evening of November 28, at about 8 p.m., Rosemond was convicted of four counts of murder-for-hire. During the two-week trial, prosecution witness Brian "Slim" McCleod testified that he participated in luring Fletcher to the Bronx to be murdered. Rosemond's attorney, David Touger, failed to convince the federal jury that his client had merely intended for his triggermen to shoot at Fletcher as opposed to killing him.






 
 Suge Knight following his 2005 shooting










Nas, James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond and Game










Foxy Brown and Jimmy Henchman















Tupac Shakur - Against All Odds













James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond 
Interview














James Rosemond, Jr. Interview



- Ran

*Updated November 2017






Saturday, October 26, 2013

The Infamous...Edward "Big Ed" Hanserd

by Ran Britt

Edward Hanserd was born October 12, 1963 and raised on the eastside of Detroit, Michigan. He grew up in the gang-ridden, impoverished, northeast Detroit neighborhood of Osborn. Before dropping out he attended Osborn High School, which has been described as having the appearance of a prison. Ironically, "Big Ed" would ultimately only grow to 5'6. Hanserd made his first steps toward becoming a druglord as a low level marijuana dealer. While his marijuana business eventually provided him with a sizable income, he still hadn't attained the kind of success realized by two childhood associates, Maserati Rick Carter and Demetrius Holloway. In fact, Carter and Holloway and their Best Friends drug network, who were higher up on the illegal drug food chain, were Hanserd's initial suppliers.

Eventually, Hanserd's success and ambition led him to break away from the Best Friends umbrella in order to establish himself independently of the by now preeminent drug organization on the eastside of Detroit. Hanserd negotiated with notorious California crack kingpin Rick Ross for a steady supply of cocaine, which allowed him to step out from underneath the shadow of Carter's organization. Hanserd expanded his inventory to crack cocaine and marketed his personalized brand of the drug, which he named "Tutti-Frutti". In order to conceal the true source of his earnings, he purchased hair salons and cultivated a public image of a successful entrepreneur. One of these salons, located on Jefferson Avenue - a main Detroit thoroughfare, quickly became Hanserd's base of operations. 

At some point, Hanserd and Carter's relationship devolved into a professional and personal rivalry. There is some dispute as to the origin of the fued between Hanserd and Carter. While some attribute the hostilities to a debt owed to Carter from Big Ed, others trace the bad blood to Hanserd's expansion into territory already held by Carter. Still others ascribe the tension to Hanserd's eschewing of Carter as his exclusive supplier in favor of an outside connection in CaliforniaWhatever the source may have been, the conflict which initially manifested itself through rumored unflattering words (Big Ed is said to have claimed that his nickname was given to him by Carter's mother), in the summer of 1987 it progressed to a public face-to-face argument in the Unisex Hair Salon owned by Hanserd and eventually led to shootouts and murder attempts between the two.

As Hanserd's business grew, he inevitably found himself both competing with his former associates and racking up arrests. In 1987, Hanserd and a few of his employees were pulled over in downtown Los Angeles by LAPD officers who declined to make a formal arrest but determined that Hanserd was in possession of a new Mercedes-Benz 500SE, Porsche and Ferrari - not to mention several false identification cards.





Big Ed (left)





Within months, Hanserd was involved in a shootout with Carter back in Detroit. The exchange of automatic gunfire resulted in Hanserd being shot in the stomach and left to recuperate for months. When questioned by police Hanserd refused to name his attackers, instead declaring that he'd "handle it" himself. In an effort to escape the danger and police pressure Big Ed temporarily relocated to Yazoo City, Mississippi. In an attempt to maintain a low profile he purchased a home in the name of his longtime girlfriend, Stephanie Jacobs. Ironically, in light of Hanserd's intention to go unnoticed, the frequent comings and goings of his associates via high-priced luxury and sports cars as well as the armed guards patrolling the grounds did garner unwarranted attention, with local residents describing the home as a fortified compound.

Big Ed's drug-running operation continued while he was away and the Hanserd organization's profile rose dramatically with law enforcement around this time.
In February of 1988, Hanserd was detained by Louisiana state police following a traffic stop wherein $198,000 in cash was seized. Another traffic stop in March resulted in the seizure of 31 kilos of cocaine from Hanserd associate, Nathaniel Wilson. In addition to the seizures, Hanserd was also arrested and charged with weapons violations on three separate occasions as well as a few DUIs.
During an arrest for a weapons violation he was quoted as telling the arresting officers, "I am going to get Maserati Rick, and then I am going to get you". Ironically, Hanserd was soon arrested during yet another traffic stop while driving a Maserati. Officers seized $3,000 more dollars of Hanserd's cash. Nevertheless, Hanserd was eventually released and made his return to Detroit where he resumed his war with Carter.





Maserati Rick





In all, Carter is said to have made three attempts on Big Ed's life, but the hostilities were very much mutual. Big Ed reportedly participated in a drive-by of Carter's mother's home while she was standing on the front porch holding Carter's 2-year old son. Two months later Big Ed tried again - this time the drive-by target was the mother of Carter's son. Big Ed however got the address wrong and instead shot up the house belonging to the next door neighbor of his intended victim. On September 10, 1988 a shootout ensued outside of one of Carter's car washes when Hanserd and another man opened fire on him. Carter  was left wounded in the stomach (similar to the one suffered by Hanserd in their first exchange of gunfire) and Hanserd and his associate were both shot in the arm. None of the participants cooperated with police investigators.

Two days later while Carter was being treated for the injuries he sustained in the shooting, one of Hanserd's enforcers, Lodrick "The Hitman" Parker entered his hospital room at Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital. When Parker left the room (number 307) Carter was dead from gunshots to the face. The 29-year-old was officially pronounced dead at 6:01 pm. The assailant, Parker, was reputed to be the third man present during Carter and Hanserd's final confrontation. Hanserd himself had an airtight alibi as he was in police custody for unlawful possession of a firearm during the time of the shooting. Hanserd denied any involvement in the shooting and simply confessed to investigators that he'd once thrown a brick through the window of one of Carter's car washes. Carter's murder became the first time that there was a shooting inside the hospital in it's 50 year history. The circumstances of his killing resulted in a permanent change in hospital policy throughout the city and increased security measures and screening for visitors.





Hanserd's top enforcer, Lodrick Parker




 

In January of 1990, Hanserd was once again targeted in a traffic stop while driving a brand new Ford Bronco which he'd purchased two days earlier. The stop netted police a seizure of $369,000 of Hanserd's cash. In March of that year Hanserd was apprehended after a police chase that ended in a four-car pile-up that included Hanserd's BMW. He was again charged with weapons violations when a search of his car turned up a MAC-10 and an Israeli assault rifle.

Two years after Carter's murder, Hanserd was questioned in the kidnapping and disappearance of Carter's business partner, Demetrius Holloway. Eventually, it was revealed that Holloway had orchestrated his own public, but faked, kidnapping in an attempt to evade both his rivals and law enforcement. On October 8, 1990, Holloway was shot in the back of the head while shopping in his favorite store. As with Carter's murder two years earlier, the triggerman was Lodrick Parker and again Hanserd was in police custody at the time of Holloway's shooting.

In late 1990, several of Hanserd's hair salons were firebombed. Hanserd was brought to trial when one of his associates, Anthony Medina, began cooperating with federal prosecutors during their investigation against him for drug trafficking. Hanserd and his attorney Stephen Rabaut learned that his organization faced 24 counts related to drug trafficking when the federal indictment was unsealed on August 2, 1990. Prosecutors estimated that Hanserd trafficked upwards of 200 kilos of cocaine from 1984 to 1990 and generated $54 million annually in narcotics sales at his peak. According to law enforcement, he was shot 9 times on three separate occasions. In 1991, Hanserd pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and two counts of using a firearm in a drug trafficking offense. On May 9, 1991 he was sentenced to 30 years on the conspiracy count and five years each on the firearms charges. Hanserd was transported to the medium-security federal prison FCI Pekin in Pekin, Illinois and later to FCI Victorville, a medium-security federal prison in Victorville, California. He is currently completing his sentence in a halfway-house in Sacramento, CA and is
scheduled to be released on November 11, 2016.


Updated 6/11/16





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