The Denver Post

Prison gang retains power

- By Kirk Mitchell

The Denver Post

Five years after a parolee killed Colorado prisons chief Tom Clements and Commerce City father of three Nathan Leon, the white supremacis­t gang that some officials have linked to the deaths continues to grow more powerful and deadly behind bars.

The gunman, Evan Ebel, died days later in a shootout with Texas lawmen, but the questions remain: Did he act alone? Did he have help from fellow members of the 211 Crew prison gang?

Only one person has faced justice in the case since the March 17, 2013, killing of Leon and the assassinat­ion two days later of Clements, the head of the Department of Correction­s. That was Stevie Vigil, the woman who pleaded guilty to buying the gun that Ebel used. A feder-

al judge in 2014 sentenced her to 27 months in prison.

El Paso County Sheriff Bill Elder, whose office oversees the investigat­ion, said in an interview this week that he believes Ebel acted alone when he killed Leon for his Domino’s pizza uniform, and then shot Clements on the doorstep of his home in Monument on the night of March 19, 2013.

Elder said he asked an investigat­or in 2016 to go over all the evidence for a third time, on the chance that new evidence could be uncovered pointing to possible conspirato­rs. An investigat­or from Colorado Attorney General Cynthia Coffman’s office also independen­tly reviewed all the evidence over a span of nine months, he said.

“They’ve looked at everything and anything. To date (they) have not turned over any evidence that disproves that Evan Ebel acted alone,” Elder said. “I would love nothing more than to prove a conspiracy to the 211 Crew.” But so far the only things tying the case to others, he said, are suppositio­ns not unlike conspiracy theories in the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy.

Ebel left behind many intriguing clues that point to a conspiracy, including a hit list that mentioned other Colorado officials, and he had contact with fellow members of the 211 Crew in the days before and after the shootings. Ebel called one 211 Crew member on March 21, 2013, just moments before he died in a chase and shootout on a Texas highway, according to Texas investigat­ors.

The perception behind bars is that 211 Crew leaders, including gang general Daniel “Jimbo” Lohr, ordered Ebel to kill Clements, Lohr said in a phone interview last year from a Pennsylva- nia federal prison. It doesn’t matter that Lohr denies involvemen­t, or even that Elder believes otherwise — that is the widely held belief, Lohr acknowledg­ed. That perception has increased the respect fellow prisoners have for the gang and helped swell its ranks, he said. But the consequenc­es have been a mixed blessing, he added.

Texas Rangers and key Colorado investigat­ors have said the gang’s leaders ordered Ebel to kill Clements. In fact, a confidenti­al informant whose claims are partially confirmed by phone records claims that Lohr boasted that “I ordered that,” meaning the Clements hit, a report by the Texas Rangers says.

A Texas official familiar with the investigat­ion but not authorized to speak publicly about it recently said all evidence points to a gang conspiracy. Colorado officials who previously led the Clements murder investigat­ion, including John San Agustine, have also said they repeatedly recommende­d that District Attorney Dan May’s office file charges against coconspira­tors including Lohr and other 211 Crew members. Lohr said he was surprised they didn’t charge him.

In an effort to diffuse the power base of the 211 Crew, Clements’ successor, executive director Rick Raemisch, moved the gang’s “inner circle” members with a rank of general — all with a vote when it comes time to order hits and beatings — outside Colorado’s prison system to state or federal prisons in Wyoming, Pennsylvan­ia, New Hampshire, West Virginia, Kentucky, Colorado and Ohio.

But the 211 Crew has merged with other white supremacis­t prison gangs, including the Aryan Syndicate and the American Nazi Party. Leaders of the reconfigur­ed gang have been charged with or accused of carrying out gang hits behind bars, court records indicate.

On Aug. 11, 2014, gang members Robert “Nugs” Sprowles and Thomas “Frosty” Johns allegedly stabbed gang member Cody Gray at Sterling Correction­al Facility at the behest of Aryan Empire generals Vernon Templeman, John Dehmer and Brandon “Creeper” Cox, according to court records.

District Attorney Brittny Lewton charged Sprowls and Johns with first-degree murder in 2014. But she didn’t charge Templeman, Cox and Dehmer until 2017 when Templeman agreed to testify how the hit was ordered. Templeman agreed to turn over evidence in Gray’s slaying in exchange for a transfer from a federal prison in Ohio populated with a large number of black gang members to a prison more friendly to white supremacis­t gang generals, Lewton said.

On June 6, 2015, William Pettigrew, an Aryan Empire soldier, entered the cell of rival gang member Joshua Edmunds at Limon Correction­al Facility and stabbed him to death with a shank, according to court and coroner’s records and a former 211 Crew member.

Pettigrew was ordered to kill Edmunds for stealing food from the gang’s store at Limon, according to the former 211 Crew member who spoke to The Denver Post on condition of anonymity because a hit has been ordered on him for snitching on the gang. According to court records, Pettigrew, 33, was charged with first-degree murder after deliberati­on, second-degree murder, possession of contraband (a shank) and six counts of being a habitual criminal.

Since Clements’ murder, the Aryan Empire has grown more brazen because it believes that if it can kill the executive director of the Colorado Department of Correction­s, it can get away with anything, the former gang member said.

 ??  ?? Nathan Leon, left, and Tom Clements were killed by Evan Ebel in a two-day period five years ago.
Nathan Leon, left, and Tom Clements were killed by Evan Ebel in a two-day period five years ago.
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