According to court documents, Lawal described himself as “involved in money laundering and politically affiliated in Nigeria”.
A Nigerian
living in Florida, Durojaiye Monsuru Obafemi Lawal, has been arrested by agents
of US Drug Enforcement Agency, along with some policemen, in a sting operation
against Sinaloa cartel.
Also arrested
were two Miami Dade policemen Roderick Flowers and Keith Edwards, who are also
celebrities on social media, wearing gold jewellery, smoking cigars, aping the
Bad Boys, the Miami police action film franchise.
Federal
authorities now said the two cops could go to jail together, according to a
report by Miami Herald.
Flowers and
Edwards are due to appear in federal court today, the day after authorities
arrested the two on charges that they agreed to act as a muscle for an
undercover agent-set up cocaine trafficking operation.
Also charged:
A Miami money laundering suspect named Manuel Carlos Hernandez, who boasted
Flowers was on his payroll, according to court records.
According to
a criminal complaint, the case was brought with the help of a confidential
source impersonating a Mexican cartel member, arranging the international money
laundering agreement with Hernandez, and calling in the two police officers to
help transport a shipment of “white girls” – code word – for cocaine packages
Homestead to Aventura.
“Welcome to
the Sinaloa Cartel,” the source told officials, who laughed and drove away
after the September 16 transportation operation in Miami.
The complaint
was lifted late Thursday evening.
Flowers and
Edwards are charged with conspiracy to distribute and possess cocaine. The
cocaine was indeed a fake, and the entire operation was carefully coordinated
by agents, according to court records.
The charges
were the culmination of a six month investigation by the US Drug Enforcement
Administration.
Hernandez is
charged with conspiracy and money laundering.
He is charged
with another man, Trevanti McLeod, and Durojaiye Obafemi Monsuru Lawal, who,
according to court documents, described himself as “involved in money
laundering and politically affiliated in Nigeria”.
Flowers and
Edwards were both members of the Miami-Dade Priority Response Team, a unit set
up to respond to major incidents after the Parkland School massacre in 2018.
Flowers, 30,
came from a law enforcement family. His sister is a police officer in Georgia.
His father is Raleigh Flowers, the Bal Harbor police chief and a former
high-ranking Hialeah officer.
Edwards is a
former soldier and father of three children.
DEA agents
and the confidential source first focused on Hernandez, who ran Hernandez
Investments in Davie. As the months progressed, Hernandez bragged about the
numerous clients he’d laundered money for, his fat bank account, and plans to
open a barber shop and car wash to launder dirty money.
During the
summer, the source arranged in secret audio and video recordings a series of
laundering deals with Hernandez, Lawal and McLeod that involved drug money.
In July,
Hernandez told the source that a Russian strip club owner was trying to launder
dirty money, the complaint said. He later told the source that “he made some
calls to law enforcement agencies” to investigate the Russians and learned that
they were informants, the complaint said.
The following
month the source asked if Hernandez’s secret cop source could keep a license
plate for someone who allegedly owed him money.
DEA agents
later learned that the police officer who ran the day through a law enforcement
database was Flowers.
Hernandez
later told the source that Flowers and an unnamed cop cousin were “on his
payroll” acting as “collateral for money laundering activities,” the complaint
said.
The source
met Flowers in Hernandez’s office on September 9. The source asked if he was
actually a police officer. “Yeah, I don’t look like that, do I?” Flowers
supposedly answered.
The source
eventually offered to rent flowers to protect a shipment of cocaine that was to
be transported from a motel in Homestead to a location in Aventura.
Flowers
eagerly explained his safety skills and even stated that he and Edwards both
had SWAT training.
“Flowers
showed with his hands that he was trained to shoot in the stomach and chest
area,” said the complaint. “He stated that if it was a headshot, it would be
from the ears near the forehead.”
The source
paid Flowers $ 5,000 upfront, according to the DEA. Edwards later met the
source in person and also boasted of his military-grade security training.
He also
referred to himself as a “cop’s cop”, according to the complaint.
The operation
contract took place smoothly on September 16. Flowers and Edwards accompanied
the transport in separate cars from a hotel in Homestead to one in Aventura,
according to DEA.
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