Desperate Cry for Help Spurred ‘Kings of Dust’ Takedown in Harlem

“The lesson to take away from this is that when you reach out, people may be working on the problem,”

An anonymous letter pleading for help spurred a 15 month investigation that brought down the “Kings of Dust” PCP drug ring, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. told community leaders.

The grip the $1 million a year gang had on East Harlem’s Milbank Frawley Houses left residents living in terror — and one of them begged authorities for action.

“You’ve got to help us get our community back,” Vance said, paraphrasing the letter at a meeting Monday night.

“We heard the message loud and clear.”

Vance, along with NYPD Manhattan North Borough Commander William Morris, told the group that the investigation that led to the indictment of 35 people last week is proof that authorities may be working to solve problems, even if residents may feel like their complaints are not being addressed.

Residents at the Milbank Frawley Houses said they told New York City Housing Authority officials and police for years about the ring — which may have used a child as young as 8-years-old as a lookout.

Upon hearing about a problem like drug dealing, police commanders can send in officers who will scatter the dealers, which will likely return,  Morris said.

But in conjunction with that type of policing is the “unseen” investigation that involves undercover drug buys and wiretaps. That can take much longer.

“There were 35 persons named as subjects of this investigation,” said Morris.

“There were 22 search warrants and it was a 275 count indictment. We, the police department, didn’t just go in and scatter the problem. We went in with a concerted strategy to fix the problem.”

And the problem at the complex was severe. The drug ring, which police said is suspected of several murders and shootings, allegedly controlled the courtyard at the complex.

Helpless tenants watched as the gang, which is accused of hiding 2.5 gallons of PCP in Hawaiian Punch bottles, urinated in the elevators and hallways, fought and fired weapons at the complex. Vance said the investigation recovered 7 1/2 gallons of PCP with a street value of $4.5 million.

Residents of the complex, some still afraid to use their names for fear of retribution, said the arrests set off a celebration in the complex.

“It felt like they weren’t doing anything for the longest time,” said one long-time resident who asked not to be named. “But after the arrests, we started having a dance party we were so happy.”

Both Vance and Morris said the efforts to stabilize the area are not over.

An NYPD SkyWatch surveillance tower has been placed in the area. Vance said he is looking to get area kids involved in positive activities, such as weekend basketball taught by professionals, to keep them from becoming involved with the type of drug ring that was just dismantled.

Rev. Vernon Williams, president of the Harlem Clergy Community Leaders Coalition and Perfect Peace Ministries, said the challenge is to keep younger kids from “aging up” and filling the vacuum left by the group’s take-down.

“If we don’t stop this youth genocide, it’s just going to be a process that repeats itself over and over again,” said Williams.

Morris said meetings like Monday’s are part of the process of thanking community members for their “patience” and to develop long-term solutions. Representatives from Taft, Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln houses all said they are facing issues with drug sales and shootings.

“I feel like they are trying to do something, but the community has to get together,” said Annie Davis, president of Taft Houses Tenants Association.

“We need to talk to our kids because they know what’s going on,”

For Vance, that anonymous letter is proof that law enforcement and members of the community are going to have to cooperate to solve these difficult problems.

“The lesson to take away from this is that when you reach out, people may be working on the problem,” said Vance.

Actress Patricia Clarkson’s technique for reading to children: “Be very bright and very fast,” she said last night at the Hale House Center Winter Fete at Crown, which she hosted. “Woody Allen gave me the same advice.”

Clarkson reads children’s books at the Mother Hale Learning Center in Harlem, a daycare and preschool program operated by Hale House Center.

“The kids love her, they ask her lots of questions” said Joyce Lopez-Cristescu, program coordinator, Mother Hale Learning Center.

“Improvisation is key,” Clarkson added before rejoining a huddle of guests at the bar, including Alexandra Lebenthal, chief executive officer of Lebenthal & Co., and Elissa Lumley, who runs communications at J. Christopher Capital, the firm behind the retail chain C. Wonder. Meanwhile a mustached bartender stirred up a Tom Collins made with Hangar One spiced pear-infused vodka.

The story of how Clarkson came to host the Winter Fete begins at the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood.

“I spotted her in the lobby,” said Frederick Anderson, the businessman behind the woman’s dress label Douglas Hannant. “We knew each other because Douglas had dressed her for some awards shows. She was reading a script.”

Anderson took her up to the balcony room over the garden, where Hannant was showing his latest collection. He also checked his BlackBerry, and made a comment about all the e-mails he was getting from Hale House Center, where he volunteers as a fundraiser. To his delight, he learned that Clarkson was already reading to children there. That’s when he asked her to host an event.

“I still have a stupid life,” Clarkson said. “but I do the best I can to give back and make something better.”

‘Blue Burqua’

In an industrial space turned theater in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, former “Saturday Night Live” cast member Rachel Dratch and other female comedians read poems by women from Afghanistan. An excerpt from “The Blue Cage” by Arifa:

Who am I under the blue burqa?

A mother who always suffers?

A sister who lost her brother?

A wife who lost her husband? …

Don’t look at me. I can’t help my country.

I am a prisoner under the blue burqua.

The Sunday event, “Comedians for Change,” held at Magic Futurebox, raised money for the Afghan Women’s Writing Project, which leads online workshops in prose and poetry for Afghan women.

“Being able to write their stories is the first step toward having power,” Dratch said.

Dratch’s memoir, “Girl Walks Into a Bar,” comes out in April. “I started writing because I wasn’t getting any acting jobs,” she said. “Then I got surprise pregnant and I knew I had a book.” (Dratch’s son, Eli, is now a year and half old.) The book deals with life after “Saturday Night Live,” focusing on becoming a mother at the age of 44.

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2 Responses to Desperate Cry for Help Spurred ‘Kings of Dust’ Takedown in Harlem

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