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ALL MY RIVERDALE SOLDIERS HOLD YA HEAD : FBI agents and Yonkers police swooped down to arrest a squadron of reputed crack dealers in south Yonkers yesterday, shutting down what officials described as a major crack supply line along the Riverdale Avenue corridor. Federal prosecutors unsealed 17 indictments in U.S. District Court in White Plains charging 20 Yonkers men with drug dealing. More than 100 law enforcement officers participated in the pre-dawn raids that resulted in 13 arrests. Another six defendants were already in custody on other charges. The 20th defendant, Albert "Thirst" Smith, 34, remained at large yesterday afternoon. FBI agents and Yonkers cops took more than 2 pounds of crack cocaine off the streets through seizures and undercover buys during the year-long investigation, officials said. "It's clear from the quantity of crack cocaine purchased and seized during the investigation that this crew was responsible for a significant portion of the supply side of the market for crack in Westchester," said David Velazquez, the supervisory senior resident agent in charge of the FBI's White Plains office. Several of the defendants face life sentences if convicted. All face at least five years behind bars. The dealers were referred to as the Riverdale Avenue Crew by law enforcement authorities. But there is no indication of a structured cartel running a unified drug-dealing operation in the area. "We're not alleging this was part of any organization," U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia said during a news conference announcing the indictments. In addition to the 20 men charged yesterday, a previous drug case against a Yonkers couple was also part of the investigation, authorities said. Christopher Mims, 26, was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month by a federal judge for dealing crack. Yonkers cops found 150 grams of crack, a loaded .38 caliber handgun and two speed loaders in his 2-year-old daughter's dresser drawer in the Ash Avenue apartment he shared with the toddler's mother, Ebony Smith. The mother also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a year and a day in prison. At Mims' sentencing, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Collins said Mims was "running a drug enterprise out of his baby daughter's dresser." The danger to the child caused authorities to arrest Mims when they found the stash in March rather than wait until the end of the investigation. Collins, the lead prosecutor in the case, said the defendants were arraigned throughout the afternoon yesterday. Referring to the participation of the FBI's Westchester County Violent Crimes Task Force and the Yonkers Police Department's Special Investigations Unit, Garcia said the case was a "terrific example of the type of across-the-board cooperation needed to take crack dealers off our streets." Yonkers Police Commissioner Edmund Hartnett said the case should put to rest any notion that crack no longer poses a problem to local communities. "There are those that think that maybe crack has gone away
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