Former advisor to 'Dudus', helps build case against him
A former longtime senior adviser to Jamaican drug lord, 43 year old Christopher "Dudus" Coke, who pleaded guilty last year to federal conspiracy charges in Manhattan in the United States, has been cooperating with the authorities to help build the criminal case against his former boss.
According to a new court document, the former adviser, identified only as John Doe in the filing, had been a bodyguard and close aide to Coke’s father, Jim Brown.
According to the former adviser, his tenure began in the 1980s, when Jim Brown ran what prosecutors say was the Jamaican criminal organization that his son, Christopher eventually took over.
In the 26 page statement filed yesterday in the Federal District Court in Manhattan, the former advisor said over time, he became in essence, a trusted senior counselor to the organization.
He wrote that the organization, called the Shower Posse, was based in Tivoli Gardens and it became involved in murder, extortion, armed robbery and narcotics and firearms trafficking.
In 2010, Coke was extradited after a month long manhunt that left more than 70 persons dead.
When he pleaded guilty last August, he admitted he had led the organization, which he said had distributed crack cocaine and other drugs in Jamaica and the United States.
The government’s disclosure that it had obtained the cooperation of two insider witnesses came on the eve of today's court hearing at which prosecutors are expected to present their case that Coke, should receive the maximum 23 year sentence.
Coke has written to the judge, asking for leniency; and his lawyers have made it clear in court papers that they plan to attack the government’s depiction of their client.
The judge, Robert P. Patterson Jr., called the hearing after prosecutors said they wanted to introduce evidence against Coke that went beyond the crimes for which he was convicted.

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