The Mercury News

Bay Area criminal organizati­on said to have broad reach

The violent deaths of 2 brothers among crimes feds point to

- By Nate Gartrell and Harry Harris

OAKLAND >> On April 13, 2020, a white Jeep Cherokee pulled up alongside a Honda containing Antioch resident Kameron Booth and one other person as it drove past the 23rd Street exit on Interstate 880, then opened fire.

Mortally wounded from gunfire, Booth pulled over, stumbled to the trunk, and in desperatio­n offered a passing motorist $10,000 for a task: He said he had $400,000 in cash that needed to be delivered to another person. Before he could hand over the money, Booth collapsed. Paramedics rushed him to a hospital but he died from his injuries two weeks later.

Booth's killing remains unsolved, but this month federal prosecutor­s in Sacramento revealed a bombshell: Just four days before the shooting, an Alameda County prosecutor received a call from a woman claiming to be a U.S. Attorney, inquiring about Booth. Days after the shooting, the same woman called a California Highway Patrol officer, claiming to be with the DEA, and revealed informatio­n that had never been released to the public.

That woman, according to federal prosecutor­s, was the co-leader of a mysterious criminal organizati­on that has been officially linked to identity theft, marijuana traffickin­g in several states, and EDD fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic. But court records reveal the investigat­ion also involves unsolved violent crimes, guns hidden in secret compartmen­ts, and attempts to retrieve souped-up classic cars that had been seized by law enforcemen­t.

The alleged leaders of the organizati­on are a man named Quinten Moody, 37, of Dublin, and a woman named Myra Minks, 46. Minks, Moody's onetime girlfriend, is accused of repeatedly impersonat­ing law enforcemen­t officials, including in the calls related to Booth's homicide. The third defendant, Jessica Tang, 48, of Sacramento, is charged with EDD fraud, but she's best known for her role in a notorious East Bay murder from 1999.

An indictment against the trio, filed June 16, includes charges of conspiracy to distribute marijuana to “California, Georgia, Nevada, Texas, and elsewhere,” false impersonat­ion of an officer, aggravated identity theft, and mail fraud. Most of the charges are aimed at Minks and Moody, while Tang is accused of committed EDD fraud by filling out false unemployme­nt forms in other people's names.

Moody remains in federal custody in Sacramento, while Tang has been released on a $50,000 bond, court records show. Minks was arrested June 21 in Nevada and is in custody there, pending extraditio­n to Sacramento, where a federal magistrate will decide whether to free her or keep her in jail while the case is pending.

The charging documents describe Minks as a daring impostor of law enforcemen­t officials, alleging she claimed to be a U.S. Attorney, a member of the Secret Service, an FBI agent, a DEA agent — also an airline employee — and that she and Moody drafted forged property release orders to obtain vehicles that had been seized by law enforcemen­t. For instance, in October 2020 Minks allegedly called the Colma Police Department, posing as a Secret Service agent, and asked them to release a Jeep that had been seized from one of Moody's associates, Gregory Bell, four months earlier.

Federal prosecutor­s are targeting Bell as well. He currently faces federal gun possession charges in San Francisco and Atlanta. Court records allege that he and Moody were arrested in Roseville in June 2021, after police there attempted to pull over a car containing both men at the direction of the FBI. Moody, the driver, allegedly sped away from police, reaching speeds of 100 miles per hour, before they both were arrested. Bell's phone reportedly contained a video of him and another man shooting guns at a Georgia gun range.

Prosecutor­s also allege that in 2019 Bell possessed a pistol — later linked to nonfatal shootings in Oakland and San Francisco — that was found in the hidden compartmen­t of a white Jeep. During a search of his home, authoritie­s allegedly found an unregister­ed “assault pistol” loaded with 100 rounds, as well as 40 pounds of marijuana.

Some of Minks' alleged impersonat­ions appeared to be attempts to sniff out federal informants. On April 27, 2020, she allegedly called a federal prosecutor in Georgia, posing as U.S. Attorney “Cynthia Lee” in the Bay Area to inquire about a person referred to as “Associate 1” that had been cooperatin­g with the government, naming Moody as a marijuana trafficker. The Georgia prosecutor allegedly confirmed the existence of an investigat­ion involving Associate 1 and Moody, then discovered there were no federal prosecutor­s named Cynthia Lee in the Bay Area.

Three weeks earlier, when Minks allegedly called the Alameda County DA's office, the focus of the call was Booth, according to federal authoritie­s. A DA's spokeswoma­n declined to comment on specifics and DA Nancy O'Malley didn't return an email seeking comment.

When Booth was gunned down four days after the call, it wasn't his first shootout, nor the first time he'd been caught with huge amounts of cash. In November 2018, Kameron Booth and his brother, Kyle Booth, were arrested and charged with gun and marijuana possession after they were involved in a gunbattle in San Leandro. Police searched their Hayward home and found nearly $2 million in cash and 180 pounds of marijuana, as well as a pound of marijuana and about $43,000 in their car.

Kyle Booth was shot and killed four months before his brother, in Atlanta. Authoritie­s have not announced any arrests in the double homicide, nor publicly revealed a motive beyond saying the victims appear to have been targeted.

After Kameron Booth was killed, authoritie­s discovered more than $350,000 in cash in his car. Days later, when Minks allegedly called a CHP detective while posing as a DEA agent, she knew how much cash Booth had, and that Booth and his family were marijuana trafficker­s who traveled frequently between Oakland and Atlanta, according to the complaint.

Neither fact had been revealed to the public, according to federal prosecutor­s.

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