HEROIN HIGHWAY TO HELL: Ernest McRae aka “Rat” and “Man-Man” – head rat of Drug Dealing Baltimore Gang Sentenced to 17 Years in Federal Prison

HEROIN HIGHWAY TO HELL: Ernest McRae aka “Rat” and “Man-Man” – head rat of Drug Dealing Baltimore Gang Sentenced to 17 Years in Federal Prison

Gang Operated in the Montford Avenue Area of Baltimore: Fifteen Other Defendants Have Also Pleaded Guilty to Their Roles in The Drug Conspiracy

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Baltimore, Maryland – “Rat” followed the path most often taken for drug dealers in Baltimore – choose either the life of a high-roller gang boss that either gets filled full of lead or eventually gets ratted out to the narcos and finds himself in the slammer trading tattoos with other losers. Where they are never found is living the life of a wealthy head of an organized crime syndicate – that only happens in Godfather movies.  Let’s face it – “Rat” is no El Chapo – who is in a federal slammer himself sent there for life with no possibility of tunnels.


“Rat” followed the path most often taken for drug dealers in Baltimore – choose either the life of a high-roller gang boss that either gets filled full of lead or eventually gets ratted out to the narcos and finds himself in the slammer trading tattoos with other losers.

 U.S. District Judge Ellen L. Hollander sentenced Ernest McRae, a/k/a Rat and Man Man, age 38, of Baltimore, Maryland today to 17 years in federal prison, followed by five years of supervised release, for conspiracy to distribute heroin, powder cocaine, and crack cocaine.

The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur.

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According to their plea agreements, from at least January 2012 through October 24, 2017, McRae and co-defendant Jackie Bagley controlled a drug trafficking organization (DTO) that operated in and around 1100 North Montford Avenue in Baltimore, distributing heroin, fentanyl, and powder and crack cocaine.  McRae and Bagley supplied lieutenants with drugs on a regular basis. 


Over the course of the conspiracy, over a dozen different street-level dealers worked for the GANG, distributing approximately 375 to 750 ten-dollar doses of heroin on a daily basis.  In 2017, McRae began cutting the heroin with fentanyl.

PLEA AGREEMENT

The lieutenants, in turn, supplied street-level dealers, who sold the drugs to users.  The street-level dealers were allowed to keep a portion of the proceeds and turned the rest over to the lieutenants, who then turned these profits over directly to McRae and Bagley on a nearly daily basis.  Over the course of the conspiracy, over a dozen different street-level dealers worked for the DTO, distributing approximately 375 to 750 ten-dollar doses of heroin on a daily basis.  In 2017, McRae began cutting the heroin with fentanyl.

McRae also admitted that on June 25, 2017, he was visiting clubs near Custom House Avenue in Baltimore and got into an argument with a person on the street.  McRae went to his car and retrieved a pistol with an extended magazine.  A concerned citizen notified nearby Baltimore Police officers, who were on patrol in the area.  When McRae realized the police were responding to the area, he hid the firearm in the wheel well of another vehicle.  Police recovered the gun and arrested McRae, who subsequently posted bail and was released before being arrested on federal charges.

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Fifteen co-defendants, including Jackie Bagley, have pleaded guilty to their roles in the drug distribution conspiracy.  Bagley, age 39, of Baltimore was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison and twelve other co-defendants received sentences ranging from time served to 10 years in federal prison.

United States Attorney Robert K. Hur praised the ATF, the DEA and the Baltimore Police Department for their work in the investigation.  Mr. Hur thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys Matthew DellaBetta and Michael C. Hanlon, who prosecuted this Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force case.

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