Old Los Angeles Drug Kingpin Finally Goes to Prison-Unrelenting LAPD
Detective Honored
"Old Los Angeles Drug Kingpin Finally Goes to
Prison-Unrelenting LAPD Detective Honored"
Los Angeles: On Friday, February 15, 2002, at 10:00 a.m., the
United States Attorney's Office will honor Los Angeles Police Department
Detective James "Jeff" Redman, for his outstanding investigative
work leading to the arrest and conviction of notorious drug kingpin, Eddie
Nash.
Since 1994, Detective Redman has been assigned to a multi-agency Federal
Task Force overseen by the Chief of the U. S. Attorney’s Office, Los
Angeles Organized Crime Strike Force. This task force targeted a group of
individuals involved in an elaborate Federal Fuel Tax fraud scheme. In 1996,
the task force members began to investigate a criminal conspiracy involving
Eddie Nash. During the early 1970's, Nash had been widely reputed as a major
Los Angeles area drug dealer and owned many adult nightclubs in the Southern
California region. His nightclubs included the Seven Seas, Starwood,
Odyssey, Ali Baba’s and The Kit Kat Club.
Nash was well known as the alleged mastermind of the 1981 Laurel Canyon
slayings that later became known as the "Wonderland Murders." In
that grisly case, four people were savagely bludgeoned to death in
retaliation for an alleged drug theft from Nash. LAPD detectives arrested
Nash and his bodyguard, Gregory Diles, in 1986 for the murders, but two
trials ended in acquittal. Homicide detectives had long suspected that Nash
bribed a lone dissenting juror in that case.
During a lengthy and complicated investigation spanning several years,
Detective Redman and his team of investigators, were able to identify and
locate numerous witnesses who had critical information regarding Nash’s
illegal activities. A key break came when the team located the holdout juror
and obtained an admission that he had accepted a bribe from Nash in exchange
for a jury vote to acquit him for the Wonderland Murders.
On May 16, 2000, Nash was successfully indicted by a Los Angeles Federal
Grand Jury on 16 criminal counts stemming from activities reaching back to
the early 1970's in violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organization (RICO) Act. Evidence has been established to confirm that
Nash's organization was involved in money laundering and drug trafficking
through his Southern California nightclubs. Nash was also charged with
Conspiracy to Commit Murder, Intimidating and Threatening a Witness, Bribery
of a Witness, and Bribery of a Juror in a Capital Murder Case for his
involvement in the Wonderland Murders. By agreement, Nash, who is now in his
70's, plead guilty to the above charges on September 10, 2001. Nash was
sentenced to four and one half years in prison. He will also pay a $250,000
fine and submit to five years of supervised release upon the expiration of
his prison term.
This media advisory was prepared by Public Information Officer Guillermo
Campos, Media Relations Section, 213-485-3586.
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