Saturday, August 23, 2008

Frank Lucas


Frank Lucas (born September 9, 1930 in La Grange, North Carolina and raised in Greensboro, North Carolina[5]) is a former heroin dealer, and organized crime boss in Harlem during the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was particularly known for cutting out middlemen in the drug trade and buying heroin directly from his source in the Golden Triangle. Frank Lucas is popularly known for smuggling heroin using the coffins of dead American servicemen, a claim his South Asian associate Leslie "Ike" Atkinson denies. He is the subject of the 2007 film American Gangster.

Lucas claims that the incident that sparked his motivation into the life of crime was witnessing his 12 year old cousin's murder at the hands of the KKK for apparently "reckless eyeballing" (looking at a Caucasian woman) in Greensboro, North Carolina.. He drifted through a life of petty crime until one particular occasion when he engaged in a fight with a former employer and on the advice of his mother fled to New York. In Harlem he indulged in petty crime and pool hustling before he was taken under the wing of gangster Bumpy Johnson.

His connection to Bumpy has been called into question: Lucas claimed to have been Johnson's driver for 15 years but Johnson spent only 5 years out of prison before his death in 1968; and according to Johnson's widow much of the narrative Lucas cites actually belongs to another young hustler named Zach Walker who lived with Bumpy and his family and later betrayed him.

Criminal career

After Johnson's death, Lucas traveled around and came to the realization that to be successful he would have to break the monopoly that the Italian mafia held in New York. Traveling to Southeast Asia, he eventually made his way to Jack's American Star Bar, an R&R hangout for black soldiers. It was here that he met former U.S. Army sergeant Leslie "Ike" Atkinson, a country boy from Goldsboro, North Carolina, who happened to be married to one of Lucas' cousins, which made him as good as family. Lucas is quoted as saying, "Ike knew everyone over there, every black guy in the Army from the cooks on up".
Lucas denies putting the drugs among the corpses of American soldiers. Instead he flew in a North Carolina carpenter to Bangkok and:

“ We had him make up 28 copies of the government coffins . . . except we fixed them up with false bottoms, big enough to load up with six, maybe eight kilos... It had to be snug. You couldn't have shit sliding around. Ike was very smart, because he made sure we used heavy guys' coffins. He didn't put them in no skinny guy's..." ”
— Frank Lucas


However Atkinson, nicknamed "Sergeant Smack" by the DEA, has said he shipped drugs in furniture, not caskets. Whatever method he used, Lucas smuggled the drugs into the country with this direct link from Asia. Lucas said that he made US$1 million per day selling drugs on 116th Street. Federal judge Sterling Johnson, who was special narcotics prosecutor in New York at the time of Lucas' crimes, called Lucas' operation "one of the most outrageous international dope-smuggling gangs ever, an innovator who got his own connections outside the U.S. and then sold the narcotics himself in the street." He had connections with the Sicilian and Mexican mobs, holding an enormous monopoly on the heroin market in Manhattan. In an interview, Lucas said, "I wanted to be rich. I wanted to be Donald Trump rich, and so help me God, I made it."

Lucas only trusted relatives and close friends from North Carolina to handle his various heroin operations. Lucas thought they were less likely to steal from him and be tempted by various vices in the big city. His heroin "Blue Magic" was 100% pure when shipped from Thailand and sold at 10% purity on the street. Lucas has been quoted as saying that his worth was "something like $52 million", most of it in Cayman Islands banks. Added to this is "maybe 1,000 keys (kilograms - 2.2046 pounds) of dope on hand" with a potential profit of no less than $300,000 per kilo.

This huge profit margin allowed him to buy property all over the country, including office buildings in Detroit and apartments in Los Angeles and Miami. He also bought a ranch of several thousand acres in North Carolina on which he ranged 300 Black Angus cows including a breeding bull worth $125,000.

Lucas rubbed shoulders with the elite in entertainment, politics, and crime, meeting Howard Hughes at one of Harlem's best clubs in his day. Though he owned several mink and chinchilla coats and other accessories, Frank Lucas much preferred to dress very casually and corporately as to not attract attention to himself. He fathered seven children, including a daughter, Francine Lucas-Sinclair, and a son, Frank Lucas, Jr. When he was arrested in the mid 1970s all of Lucas' assets were seized.

“ The properties in Chicago, Detroit, Miami, North Carolina, Puerto Rico - they took everything. My lawyer told me they couldn't take the money in the offshore accounts and I had all my money stored in the Cayman Islands. But that's BS - they can take it. Take my word for it. If you got something, hide it - 'cause they can go to any bank and take it. ”
— Frank Lucas


Arrests and releases

In January 1975, Frank Lucas' house in Teaneck, New Jersey was raided by a task force consisting of 10 agents from Group 22 of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and 10 New York Police Department detectives attached to the Organized Crime Control Bureau (OCCB). In his house authorities found $584,683. He was later convicted of both federal and New Jersey state drug violations. The following year he was sentenced to 70 years in prison. Once convicted, Lucas provided evidence that led to more than 100 further drug-related convictions. For his safety in 1977, Frank Lucas and his family were placed in the witness protection program. In 1981, after 5 years in prison, his 40-year Federal term and 30-year state term were reduced to time served plus lifetime parole. In 1984 he was caught and convicted of trying to exchange one ounce of heroin and $13,000 for one kilogram of cocaine. He was defended by his former prosecutor Richie Roberts and received a sentence of seven years. He was released from prison in 1991

Around 2005 Frank was involved in a car accident that broke his leg in two places. "I'll be up out of this doggone wheelchair, I guess, in about a month. I'll be glad to get rid of it because I'm tired of this wheelchair."

Lucas married Julie, a homecoming queen from Puerto Rico (not Miss Puerto Rico as portrayed in the movie American Gangster). The two often bought expensive gifts for each other including a coat she'd paid $125,000 for and a matching hat for $40,000. Julie was also jailed for her role in her husband's criminal enterprise, spending five years behind bars. After she came out of prison they lived separately for some years and Julie moved back to Puerto Rico. However they got back together in 2006, and have been married for over 40 years.

Lucas has a total of seven children although only daughter Francine with Julie. Francine entered the witness protection program with Lucas in 1977 and has since started up a webpage Yellowbrickroads with resources for the children of incarcerated parents.
One of his sons (Frank Lucas Jr) is a hip hop artist who now with his father has launched the Frank Lucas brand

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