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NEW: Michigan’s SOS Under Fire For Allowing Dead Voters To Influence Elections

Posted on November 23, 2025

NEW: Michigan’s SOS Under Fire For Allowing Dead Voters To Influence Elections

In the heart of the nation’s capital, the battle over crime and public safety has taken on a new intensity. Federal agents, prosecutors, and political leaders are no longer talking only about policies or strategies. Instead, they are showcasing bold action — raids, arrests, and seizures that span thousands of miles. This week, that action became visible in a dramatic way, as one of the most extensive law enforcement operations in recent years culminated in a wave of arrests.

Behind the headlines lies a story that stretches from Los Angeles to Baltimore to Washington, D.C., weaving together drugs, weapons, violence, and politics. It is a story of a network dismantled — and a city bracing itself for what comes next.

At the center of this storm is Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. Appointed by President Donald Trump earlier this year, Pirro has made no secret of her intent to pursue crime aggressively. This week, she stood before the press to announce the outcome of a 

More than 20 residential search warrants were executed on Tuesday morning in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Los Angeles. The scale of the operation was unprecedented for the city in recent memory. Backed by the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Metropolitan Police Department, federal agents stormed properties tied to what they described as a 

The charges? Running a network that funneled PCP and fentanyl — two of the most dangerous drugs on the streets — into Washington neighborhoods already scarred by violence.

The seizures told their own story. Authorities recovered:

18 firearms, including an AR-style rifle, a shotgun, and a Draco-style pistol.

Over two kilograms of suspected narcotics.

More than $50,000 in cash.

A pill press machine designed to manufacture counterfeit fentanyl pills.

The pill press was especially alarming. Such machines have fueled the opioid crisis, producing pills that mimic legitimate medications but often contain fatal doses of fentanyl. Investigators believe this network wasn’t just distributing — it was 

For prosecutors, the discovery underscored the scale of the operation: not just street-level dealing, but an enterprise that reached into production itself.

An eight-person conspiracy indictment unsealed last week revealed the cast of characters. The defendants came from across the country: two from California, one from Baltimore, and five from Washington, D.C.

Seven were arrested in the raids:

Leonard Edwards, 52, Washington, D.C.

Eric “Marbury” Prather, 43, Washington, D.C.

Thomas Wilton Hancock Jr. (“Fresh”), 43, Baltimore, Maryland

Sarda Smith, 36, Oxon Hill, Maryland

Michael Thomas, 49, Los Angeles, California

Reginald Lassiter, 39, Washington, D.C.

Darryl Riley, 39, Washington, D.C.

One remains at large, their indictment sealed as law enforcement continues the pursuit.

The use of street names — “Marbury,” “Fresh” — reflects a familiar pattern in organized drug networks. Aliases create barriers for investigators, shielding identities and reinforcing loyalty within the group.

Authorities believe the group concentrated much of its activity around the 2900 block of Knox Place SE in Washington. For years, the neighborhood has struggled with homicides, shootings, and drug crime. At least five killings occurred there in the last year alone.

The choice of Knox Place was no accident. Criminal networks often embed themselves in areas where economic hardship and strained policing create opportunities. For residents, the arrests may bring relief — but they also raise painful questions about why the violence had to reach such intensity before real intervention came.

Prosecutors described the network as structured like a business.

Suppliers in California sourced the drugs.

Baltimore served as a distribution hub, a midpoint connecting West Coast suppliers with East Coast dealers.

Washington, D.C. was the retail market, with local dealers flooding communities with product.

This separation of supply, distribution, and sales made the network harder to trace — but not impossible.

A turning point came earlier this year when law enforcement intercepted a shipment in Kansas containing 17 gallons of PCP. Such a quantity could supply multiple cities for months. It also revealed just how ambitious this network was, moving drugs in industrial volumes across the heartland.

The arsenal recovered in the raids reflects the violent nature of the trade. The Draco pistol in particular — compact, powerful, and favored by gangs — is emblematic of the firepower traffickers use to protect product, intimidate rivals, and enforce control.

Investigators believe the group’s operations directly contributed to spikes in shootings and homicides across D.C. neighborhoods. For Pirro, the case is proof that drug trafficking and gun violence are inseparable problems.

But Pirro’s announcements did not stop with arrests. She also revealed a policy change on firearms prosecutions that could reshape how the U.S. Attorney’s Office handles gun cases in D.C.

From now on, her office will not automatically prosecute individuals for simply possessing rifles or shotguns under D.C.’s strict local laws. Instead, federal charges will focus on:

Cases where long guns are used in violent crimes.

Cases involving defendants legally barred from possessing firearms.

This shift reflects recent Supreme Court rulings expanding Second Amendment rights, including the landmark District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) and the 2022 ruling that struck down New York’s concealed carry restrictions.

“A blanket ban on possessing shotguns and rifles cannot stand under the Supreme Court’s guidance,” Pirro said. “We will continue to seize all illegal firearms, and vigorously prosecute crimes connected with them.”

The change does not apply to handguns, which remain subject to existing prosecution guidelines.

All of this unfolds within the larger framework of President Trump’s declaration of a crime emergency in Washington, D.C.

Federal agents and National Guard troops have been deployed in the capital since early September, tasked with curbing what the White House calls an “escalating public safety crisis.”

According to administration figures, the crackdown has already led to the seizure of 76 firearms in just a few weeks. The dismantling of the drug network is being hailed as the most significant victory yet under this initiative.

Jeanine Pirro’s appointment as U.S. Attorney was controversial from the start. A former Fox News host and outspoken critic of D.C.’s crime policies, she has brought an aggressive, media-savvy style to the office.

Her early months have been marked by both high-profile arrests and setbacks. In recent weeks, two separate cases brought by her office failed to secure grand jury indictments — raising questions about strategy and preparation.

But this week’s operation may help quiet critics. By coordinating a multi-state takedown and unveiling a major conspiracy indictment, Pirro is showing the aggressive approach she promised when she took the role.

The arrests and seizures highlight several realities:

Drug trafficking today is interstate. No longer confined to one city, networks stretch across states with supply chains resembling legitimate businesses.

Firearms are central to the trade. From rifles to compact pistols, weapons protect profits and enforce control.

Federal-local cooperation is critical. Only by combining FBI, DEA, and local police resources was the network exposed and dismantled.

The stakes are immense. With counterfeit fentanyl pills and bulk PCP shipments, the potential damage to communities was enormous.

As legal proceedings begin against the seven arrested defendants, prosecutors will argue their case not just in court, but in the court of public opinion. For the Trump administration, the takedown is proof that the crime crackdown is working. For critics, questions remain about long-term solutions and whether aggressive federal presence can address the root causes of violence and addiction.

What is certain is that Washington, D.C. has become a testing ground — a city where crime, politics, and policy collide in real time.

The story of this drug network is not just about eight defendants. It is about a capital city at the center of a national debate: how to balance justice with rights, toughness with fairness, and immediate results with lasting change.

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