![]() The case, dubbed “Operation 40 Cal,” marks the first prosecution under the state’s new anti-racketeering law designed to hold gang leaders accountable for violence their organizations wreak on city streets. In all, 23 members of the gang have been charged with racketeering conspiracy, while 18 more face state drug or weapons charges, authorities said.Īmong the charges was the slaying last October of Claude Snulligan, whom authorities said was fatally shot after he worked undercover and agreed to testify against the gang’s leaders about a robbery and attempted kidnapping months earlier. The 78-page affidavit alleges the Black Souls ran an $11 million-a-year drug operation and protected the enterprise with violence that included at least seven murders from 1994 to 2012. Also arrested were a number of “top runners” and “supervisors” who authorities say control the gang’s street operations. The top leaders of one of Chicago’s most violent street gangs have been charged in a sweeping racketeering case that alleges they controlled their West Side drug empire through pattern of intimidation, kidnappings, shootings and murder dating back to the mid-1990s, according to an affidavit unsealed today in Cook County Criminal Court.īefore sunrise today, police armed with "no knock" search warrants fanned out across the Chicago area surprising dozens of leaders of the Black Souls, including Cornel Dawson, known as the gang’s chief, and Teron Odum, described as Dawson’s second-in-command. ![]() Officials: Murder, intimidation kept $11 million-a-year gang going ![]()
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