
Gun dealer to judge: Don't punish me for keeping shank in violent MDC Brooklyn jail
Federal prosecutors want Raymond Minaya, 29, to spend more than 15 years behind bars for his role in a gun-dealing ring — six years more than the ring's leader received — in part because of the sharpened metal rod and cell phones found stashed in his jail cell last year.
Minaya's lawyers essentially called the contraband a necessary reality in MDC Brooklyn, pointing out that guards found the weapon last November, just a few months after a string of violent attacks and two murders at the troubled Sunset Park lockup.
'Possessing an object to protect himself against the well-documented dangers of the MDC cannot fairly be said to be evidence that Mr. Minaya has not accepted responsibility for his conduct or withdrawn from criminal activity,' wrote Jeffrey Dahlberg and Mia Eisner-Grynberg of the Federal Defenders on Wednesday.
'Mr. Minaya did not use or threaten to use the object, nor was he ever seen brandishing it; it was merely inside his cell, arguably as a deterrent to others or as emergency protection given the recent violent incidents there.'
And the cell phones, they argue, can be the only way to reach family members due to the frequent lockdowns at the jail.
Several federal judges — including Brooklyn Federal Court Judge William Kuntz, who's scheduled to sentence Minaya on Tuesday — have railed against the notorious conditions at MDC Brooklyn and have shaved months or years off some defendants' sentences to account for the conditions inside. The jail currently houses Sean 'Diddy' Combs and alleged CEO-killer Luigi Mangione.
Prosecutors have a different perspective on Minaya's motives: the Gorilla Stone Bloods member has a long history of violence and rule-breaking behind bars when he served time in state prison, including three separate assaults on inmates, they argue.
'The government expects that the defendant, like many other MDC inmates, will use those conditions as a reason for this court to impose a lesser sentence,' prosecutors wrote in a letter to Brooklyn Federal Court William Kuntz. 'But he cannot simultaneously contribute to the dangerous conditions at the MDC and then claim them as a reason he should be granted leniency.'
Photos on his contraband phone show bags of pot and him smoking on a video call with other inmates, prosecutors note.
'Additional images appear possibly related to a contraband smuggling scheme, including images of pellets, money transfers, and dried leafy substances,' federal prosecutors wrote in a Tuesday filing.
Minaya and three other men were busted in 2023 on charges they sold more than 50 firearms to an undercover cop in Brooklyn, making the sales in a crowded waterfront park and on a playground.
Minaya sold 12 of those guns personally, including one weapon used in a 2021 shooting at a Bedford-Stuyvesant family day celebration that left eight people wounded.
All four suspects took plea deals last year. The ringleader, David McCann, was sentenced to nine years, while accomplice Tajhai Jones got just over eight years. The remaining defendant, Calvin Tabron, awaits sentencing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Son of Norway princess charged with four rapes
The 28-year-old son of Norway's crown princess has been charged with raping four women and several acts of violence, and risks up to 10 years in prison, a prosecutor said on Monday. Marius Borg Hoiby, who was born from a relationship before Crown Princess Mette-Marit married Crown Prince Haakon, has been under investigation since his arrest on August 4 last year on suspicion of assaulting a girlfriend. He is accused of raping four women while they were sleeping. In at least three of the cases, he met the women the same day and had consensual sex before the alleged rapes, public prosecutor Sturla Henriksbo told reporters. Hoiby is also charged with filming their genitals without their knowledge. Henriksbo said investigators had video clips and photographs as evidence. The four rapes allegedly took place in 2018, 2023 and 2024, the last one after the police investigation began. Other charges against Hoiby include domestic abuse against a former partner and several counts of violence, disturbing the peace, vandalism and violations of restraining orders against another former partner. The only victim identified by the prosecution was Hoiby's ex-girlfriend Nora Haukland, whom he is accused of physically and psychologically abusing in 2022 and 2023. - 'clenched fist' - "The violence consisted, among other things, of him repeatedly hitting her in the face, including with a clenched fist, choking her, kicking her and grabbing her hard," the prosecutor said. The maximum penalty for the offences in the indictment is up to 10 years in jail, he said. "These are very serious acts that can leave lasting scars and destroy lives." The palace remained tight-lipped after the announcement. "It is for the courts to consider this matter and reach a decision," spokeswoman Sara Svanemyr said in a comment emailed to AFP. The prosecutor said that Hoiby, as a member of the royal family, would not be treated "more lightly or more severely" than anyone else in similar circumstances. Hoiby has already admitted to assault and vandalism in the August 2024 incident. In a public statement 10 days after his arrest, he said he had acted "under the influence of alcohol and cocaine after an argument", having suffered from "mental troubles" and struggling "for a long time with substance abuse". A tall blond who cultivates a "bad boy" look with slicked back hair, earrings, rings and tattoos, Hoiby has been in the eye of a media storm since his arrest. When the rape allegations emerged in November, he spent a week in custody -- unprecedented for a member of Norway's royal family. After his release, he reportedly went to rehab in London. - 'Gilded cage' - Hoiby is the child of a brief romance between his mother and Morten Borg -- who has also been convicted of abuse and drug-related crimes. They were together at a time when the future princess was part of Norway's house music scene, known for its abundance of hash and ecstasy. He was propelled into the spotlight at the age of four when his mother married Norway's crown prince, with whom she went on to have two more children. Hoiby was raised by the royal couple alongside his step-siblings Princess Ingrid Alexandra and Prince Sverre Magnus, now aged 21 and 19. Unlike them, however, he has no official public role. "He has been put in a virtually impossible position: one foot in, one foot out. He is not technically part of the royal household but he grew up in it," said Sigrid Hvidsten, royals commentator at the newspaper Dagbladet. "He has lived in a grey zone, a kind of gilded cage," she told AFP in December 2024. A cage that has not kept him away from controversy in recent years. According to media reports, he hung out with gang members, Hells Angels bikers and members of Oslo's Albanian mafia. In 2023, police contacted him to have a cautionary talk after he was seen moving in the same circles as "notorious criminals". It emerged last year that Hoiby had already been arrested in 2017 for using cocaine at a music festival. cbw/po/tw


New York Times
18 minutes ago
- New York Times
Newsmax Will Pay $67 Million to Settle Dominion Defamation Lawsuit
The right-wing cable channel Newsmax has agreed to pay $67 million to settle a libel lawsuit that Dominion Voting Systems had brought against the channel for falsely claiming that the voting machine company had rigged votes in the 2020 U.S. presidential election. The settlement, which the companies completed on Aug. 15, was disclosed in an S.E.C. filing by Newsmax. It noted that Newsmax would make the payments in three installments by Jan. 15, 2027. A Dominion spokeswoman confirmed the deal in a statement, saying, 'We are pleased to have settled this matter.' Newsmax did not offer an apology, saying in a statement on Monday that it stood by its coverage as 'fair, balanced and conducted within professional standards of journalism.' In 2021, Dominion sued Newsmax for $1.6 billion, accusing the cable channel of knowingly broadcasting conspiracy theories that falsely implicated the company in election fraud and vote rigging. Dominion accused Newsmax of making the baseless claims in 18 statements on television, as well as in a social media post. The statements included false claims that Dominion's software had manipulated vote counts, that Dominion had ties to a Venezuelan company and that Dominion paid kickbacks to certain government officials. In April, Judge Eric M. Davis of the Delaware Superior Court ruled that Dominion had presented 'clear and convincing evidence' that the statements from Newsmax were false and defamatory, allowing the case to proceed to a trial. The trial, where a jury would decide whether Newsmax had broadcast the claims despite knowing they were false and the extent of damages to Dominion, had been set for earlier this year but was postponed. Nearly five years after the 2020 election, a wave of litigation over the broadcasting of false claims is nearing a conclusion. In April 2023, Fox News agreed to pay Dominion $787.5 million to resolve a separate defamation lawsuit over the network's extensive promotion of conspiracy theories that falsely linked Dominion to interference in the 2020 election. Newsmax settled a similar case brought by another voting technology company, Smartmatic, in September for $40 million. Some cases are still underway. Fox News faces a $2.7 billion lawsuit from Smartmatic, which is set to proceed to trial in a Manhattan state court unless the parties reach a settlement. Fox has said it is willing to defend itself at trial, and it has criticized Smartmatic's damages claims as 'intended to chill First Amendment freedoms.'


CBS News
19 minutes ago
- CBS News
Woman found dead inside car on Cross County Parkway in Mount Vernon, N.Y.
Police are investigating the death of a woman found inside a car on the shoulder of the Cross County Parkway in Mount Vernon, New York. Westchester County Police said the woman's death is considered suspicious and it is being investigated as a crime. They added she "may have been targeted for violence." Police responded to a report of a disabled vehicle on the shoulder of the parkway around 8 a.m. Sunday just before the Broad Street exit. An officer found the woman dead behind the wheel of the car. The Westchester County Medical Examiner's Office removed the woman's body from the scene and will conduct an autopsy to determine her cause of death. Her name has not yet been released. Police added there is no known threat to the public. The Cross County Parkway stretches from the Saw Mill River Parkway in Yonkers to the Hutchinson River Parkway in Mount Vernon.