Chicago Sun-Times

10 Four Corner Hustlers charged with drug traffickin­g

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @tomschuba

Federal prosecutor­s on Thursday announced drug traffickin­g charges against 10 members or associates of the Four Corner Hustlers street gang.

The investigat­ion, dubbed “Operation American Hustle,” resulted in the seizure of “multiple kilograms” of heroin, cocaine and 10 firearms, including a MAC-10 submachine gun and an AK-47-style rifle, federal authoritie­s said.

Led by Homeland Security Investigat­ions and the Chicago Police Department, the probe stretched from February 2021 to April 2022 and relied on “undercover and covert operations,” including wiretappin­g multiple cellphones and buying narcotics at three open-air drug markets in West Garfield Park that were ultimately shut down, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

U.S. Attorney John Lausch said the goal was to “dismantle” an operation that profited from selling “extremely potent drugs that have wreaked havoc in too many of our communitie­s across the country and right here in Chicago.” He noted that some of the heroin that was recovered contained fentanyl, a highly potent synthetic opioid.

A complaint filed Tuesday charged all 10 men with federal drug conspiracy, which carries a possible life sentence. They have all appeared in court and remain in custody, prosecutor­s said.

They are Nathaniel Evans, 38, of Aurora; Jarelle Jones, 24, of Forest Park; Marquis Jones, 29, of Chicago; Devontay Logan, 27, of Chicago; Joseph Williams, 31, of Chicago; Dornell Williams, 34, of Chicago; Teremius Webb, 25, of Chicago; Antonio Fletcher, 40, of Chicago; Kyle Linton, 25, of Chicago; and Maurice Bell, 40, of Chicago.

In addition, Lausch said 21 other people were hit with state drug charges in Cook County court.

The complaint describes Evans as the ringleader of an operation that ran three drug markets in the 3900 blocks of West Jackson Boulevard and West Van Buren Street and the 4000 block of West Maypole Avenue. The Van Buren spot was opened last November, long after the investigat­ion began.

Law enforcemen­t officials seized cocaine and fentanyl-laced heroin and made numerous undercover purchases at the drug spots, where narcotics were typically sold in small baggies costing $10, according to the complaint.

Because much of the business was coordinate­d using cellphones, the complaint notes, investigat­ors wiretapped phones belonging to six of the men involved in the sprawling drug operation, including Evans. They were used to discuss “staffing, narcotics supply, the collection of narcotics proceeds, and efforts to avoid law enforcemen­t,” according to the complaint.

Then on March 25, it states, officials searched a “stash house” in the 3600 block of West Chicago Avenue and found more than $58,000 in cash, more than four kilograms of both heroin and cocaine, two handguns, the AK-47-style rifle and the MAC-10, which was equipped with a silencer. Over the course of the investigat­ion, authoritie­s recovered three more rifles, two more handguns and a shotgun, prosecutor­s said.

But the search also uncovered 17 cellphones, including the one Evans was caught using on a wiretap a few months earlier.

Evans, who is nicknamed “Head” and “Bro,” was most recently arrested in the 3800 block of West Jackson Boulevard with 540 baggies of heroin, according to Cook County court records. The charges were dropped five days later.

Before that, the felon was convicted of drug and gun charges and multiple counts of battery, according to Cook County records.

As part of his drug operation, Jarelle Jones, Marquis Jones, Joseph Williams and Dornell Williams worked as “shift managers,” according to the complaint.

Logan allegedly got the drugs from suppliers, took them to the market on Jackson and collected cash from the sales. Bell similarly obtained drugs for the operation on Maypole, while Webb, Fletcher and Linton were street dealers, prosecutor­s said.

 ?? SUN-TIMES PAT NABONG/ ?? U.S. Attorney John Lausch on Thursday announced charges in “Operation American Hustle.”
SUN-TIMES PAT NABONG/ U.S. Attorney John Lausch on Thursday announced charges in “Operation American Hustle.”

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