Columbia Point Dawgs

Columbia Point Dawgs

Weapons and cash seized from members of CPD.
Founded 1988
Founding location Boston, Massachusetts
Years active 1980's–present
Territory United States of America, Boston
Ethnicity Primarily African American
Membership 80+
Criminal activities Drug trafficking, robbery and murder
Rivals Orchard Park Gang, Greenwood Street Posse

Columbia Point Dawgs also called CPD is an criminal organization and street gang located in Boston. They are involved in murder, drug trafficking and violence.[1]

History

The gang was named after the Columbia Point housing development that was razed in the 1980s to make way for today’s more refined Harbor Point on the Bay apartment community.

In the early 1990s, the CPD was largely run by four families, all of which have descendants among the Targets in this case: the Williams family, the Woods family, the Berry family, and the Funches family. Members of the CPD, then and now, often identified themselves by wearing Major League Baseball clothing and caps depicting the colors and logos of the Pittsburgh Pirates (Black and Gold) and the Philadelphia Phillies (Red and White), with the on both logos used to identify the "Point" Columbia Point).[2]

The CPD expanded its drug trafficking business through southern Massachusetts, establishing strongholds in Brockton and Fall River, Southern New Hampshire, and Southern Maine.[2]

In June 2015, 48 members of Columbia Point Dawgs were arrested and charged on gun and drug charges after a two year investigation in which Vincent Lisi, special agent in charge of Bostons FBI office said “It is one of, if not the largest, gang takedowns that we’ve seen in Boston — to arrest the most dangerous subjects out there,”.[3]

In September 28, 1995, Bobby Brown was in Boston to visit friends and family. While in Boston Bobby Brown and his friend Sealey went to visit a local night club near Orchad park. A man jumped out and shot Steven Sealey three times while he was seated in Whitney Houston's Bentley with her husband, Bobby Brown and than ran into the Orchard Park Projects.[4]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.