Baltimore Sun

5 more plead guilty in case linked to shooting of girl, 3

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Five more Baltimore men have pleaded guilty to federal drug and racketeeri­ng charges in a case that alleged numerous acts of violence, including the 2014 shooting death of 3-year-old McKenzie Elliott. The five men are admitted members and associates of the Old York Money Gang, or OYMG, which operated out of the Waverly area, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Davonte “Chopper” Rich, 25, and Jason Snowden, 22, pleaded guilty to participat­ing in a racketeeri­ng conspiracy in connection with gang membership. Emmanuel Rose, 27, Keith Wilson, 25, and Calvin “Monster” Watson, 27, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute between 280 and 840 grams of crack cocaine. The man accused of shooting Elliott is not among those who submitted guilty pleas. According to Rich’s plea agreement, OYMG members regularly carried guns to defend the gang’s territory and violently expelled OYMG rivals and antagonist­s. From July 30 to Aug. 1, 2014, Rich and other OYMG members attacked three people who entered the gang’s territory, and one person was stabbed. Two days later, the three victims returned to the same OYMG drug shop, at which point an OYMG member fired multiple gunshots at a vehicle carrying the victims. One person was shot in the head, and a stray bullet struck and killed Elliott, who was playing on her porch. Terrell Plummer, 28, was charged with use of a firearm resulting in her death. U.S. District Judge George L. Russell III has scheduled sentencing for Watson for Dec. 19. He faces a sentence of 90 months in federal prison if the court accepts the plea. Four remaining defendants, including Plummer, are scheduled to go on trial Nov. 5. At- torneys for Rose, Rich, Snowden and Watson could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Monday afternoon. Julie M. Reamy, an attorney representi­ng Wilson, declined to comment.

Ex-Howard officer admits falsifying overtime records

A former Howard County police officer pleaded guilty Monday to falsifying overtime documents to qualify for payouts he did not earn, according to a department news release. Clate Moton-Jackson, a14-year police veteran, pleaded guilty to one misdemeano­r count and agreed to pay $15,000 in restitutio­n and to step down from his position as part of a plea deal with prosecutor­s, according to Howard County police. Internal affairs officials began looking at the 41-year- old Frederick County resident in July 2017, after questions were raised about whether he had given false informatio­n to the agency. At the time, Moton-Jackson was working at an off-site location as a computer crimes investigat­or in the digital forensics unit. Investigat­ors found in video footage and key access records that Moton-Jackson had claimed on multiple dates to be working, but had never entered the building, police said. take her into a basement and inappropri­ately touch her, according to the state’s attorney’s office. She said Fuentes would “hurt her” whenever she was with the baby sitter and told her not to tell her parent, according to the release. Fuentes is facing 25 years in jail and is scheduled for sentencing Nov. 27, the release states. A public defender representi­ng Fuentes could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Monday afternoon.

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