Ol’Otis
The Picasso of the Ghetto
The rags-to-riches drug story of two South-Central Los Angeles gang members ended in a wealthy Encino neighborhood Friday when federal officials seized a $1.1-million hilltop house used in running a cocaine empire that reached halfway across the country.
The seizure of the Encino house and two other luxury homes in nearby Tarzana, along with five expensive cars and an expensive speedboat, was hailed by local and federal officials as the most dramatic move yet against major suppliers of cocaine in the South-Central area.
Mayor Tom Bradley, flanked by officials of the Los Angeles Police Department and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, called the action a new “beginning” in an increased effort to cripple major cocaine dealers financially by seizing their assets.
“This seizure is a clear signal to other dope dealers that you may live high on the hog for a while, but we’re going to get you,” Bradley said. “We’re going to seize whatever assets we can to put the drug dealers out of business.”
The seizure of the Encino house and two other luxury homes in nearby Tarzana, along with five expensive cars and an expensive speedboat, was hailed by local and federal officials as the most dramatic move yet against major suppliers of cocaine in the South-Central area.
Mayor Tom Bradley, flanked by officials of the Los Angeles Police Department and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, called the action a new “beginning” in an increased effort to cripple major cocaine dealers financially by seizing their assets.
“This seizure is a clear signal to other dope dealers that you may live high on the hog for a while, but we’re going to get you,” Bradley said. “We’re going to seize whatever assets we can to put the drug dealers out of business.”
