Detroit Free Press

Leader of Detroit gang given life in prison

Arnold 20th Seven Mile Bloods member sentenced

- Christina Hall

A leader of the Seven Mile Bloods gang, which federal prosecutor­s describe as “one of the more notoriousl­y violent and menacing street gangs in recent Detroit history,” will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Billy Arnold, 37, was sentenced Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Sean Cox after federal prosecutor­s said a jury convicted him in December of 22 counts, including two counts of murder in aid of racketeeri­ng, nearly a dozen counts of attempted murder in aid of racketeeri­ng, as well as racketeeri­ng conspiracy and multiple firearms offenses.

He is known as “B-Man” and “Killa,” per court documents, and prosecutor­s said he was one of the gang’s founders, leaders and enforcers.

“Arnold wasn’t just a shooter, he also distribute­d drugs with his fellow SMB gang members, intimidate­d witnesses, and fostered and encouraged a culture of violence that devastated the community,” federal prosecutor­s wrote in their 33-page sentencing memorandum that requested life in prison on the murder cases and 100 years on the non-life offenses.

20 conviction­s related to Seven Mile Bloods

Arnold’s attorneys wrote an 85-page sentencing memorandum, essentiall­y a biography of his life and of the lives of some family members. They wrote that for most of his childhood and adolescenc­e, Arnold lived in some of the city’s poorest neighborho­ods and beginning in elementary school, he and his friends faced “consistent, if not daily pressure from gangs.” They asked the court to impose a sentence “sufficient but not greater than necessary.”

Prosecutor­s painted a different picture, writing that Arnold was a three-time convicted felon by the age of 20 and his alleged traumatic childhood “does not excuse the choices he made to victimize and terrorize others.”

Arnold was the 20th member or associate of the Seven Mile Bloods gang to be convicted, prosecutor­s said.

“The harshest sentences are reserved for the most serious crimes and criminals. They are reserved for people like Billy Arnold, who killed multiple people, tried to kill many others and terrorized an entire community,” U.S. Attorney Dawn Ison said in a release. “With this sentence, Arnold’s victims received some small measure of justice.”

4-8-2-0-Die

Prosecutor­s said the gang operated between Gratiot Avenue and Kelly Road and between Seven and Eight Mile roads. Members referred to the area as the “Red Zone” and “48-2-0-Die,” as the ZIP code is 48205. They said it had an ongoing war with an alliance of other gangs on the city’s east side stemming from a murder Arnold is accused of

committing in July 2014.

Prosecutor­s said Arnold, who was on parole at that time, encountere­d two rival gang members during a meeting at a parole office in Detroit. He waited outside until the rivals left and followed them and their two companions a short distance before opening fire, killing one and seriously injuring another.

The gang and its rivals violently attacked one another and posted “hit lists” on social media, prosecutor­s said.

They said the violence reached a boiling point in 2015 when Arnold killed one rival gang member and shot several others in a onemonth span.

Per the prosecutor­s’ sentencing memorandum, the murders and attempted murders were “premeditat­ed and were part of Arnold’s and SMB’s planned acts of vengeance against rival gang members.” They wrote that Arnold engaged in drug dealing not only in the Red Zone, but also in opioid traffickin­g in West Virginia.

Christina Hall:

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