Two men facing state charges in ongoing investigation into unsanctioned Charleston County nightclub
Multiple federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies carried out a targeted sting operation at the Alamo club on Highway 78 around 3 a.m. on June 1, which resulted in the arrests of 80 people, including two alleged high-level cartel members and one person wanted in an international murder investigation.
Warrants provided June 6 by the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) indicate that further investigation in the aftermath of what has been called 'Operation Last Stand' has resulted in additional charges against two individuals.
Benjamin Reyna Flores, 59, was charged with Sale of Alcohol by an Unlicensed Person, Unlawful Storage of Alcoholic Liquors, Unlawful Sale of Liquor and Unlawful Sale of Beer.
Terone Lavince Lawson, 44, was charged with Possession of Psilocybin MushroomsPossession of Methamphetamine, Possession of Cocaine and two counts of Possession of a Firearm by a Person Convicted of Certain Crimes.
The warrants state that Lawson was working as a security guard at the nightclub at the time of the raid, and that drugs and weapons were found in his vehicle.
Charleston County Sheriff Carl Ritchie said during a June 2 press conference that the agency had been monitoring the unlicensed club since November 2024.
Immigration advocates say Charleston County sting operation unfairly targeted Latinos and Hispanics
Authorities said seven people believed to be victims of human trafficking were discovered inside the club during the raid, as well as a missing juvenile.
More than 70 people who were taken into custody were believed to be in the country illegally, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The agency also claimed the club was run by a suspected member of Los Zetas, a Mexican drug cartel.
But few details surrounding who exactly was swept up in the operation have raised concerns of racial profiling among some in the Hispanic and Latino communities, with immigration advocates calling for more transparency.
'Many of us are too afraid to speak up — not because we're guilty, but because we fear retaliation,' Alejandar Delaveea said in a June 6 press conference. 'Because we don't have legal status. Just being in the wrong place at the wrong time is treated like a crime — even if it's your first offense. If living life is a crime, then I guess I'm guilty… but one thing I won't be is silent.'
The investigation remains ongoing.
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Troops and federal agents briefly descend on LA's MacArthur Park in largely immigrant neighborhood
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Chicago Tribune
6 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
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The transitional governing council, which is supposed to serve as an interim government, is instead a feckless body riven by internecine fighting between various personalities and interest groups. Haitian officials are at a loss for answers and have resorted to desperate measures, such as teaming up with Erik Prince, whose Blackwater mercenary group gained a poor reputation during the U.S. occupation of Iraq. The Haitian security forces, or what's left of them, are now using drones to target gang leaders, although none have been killed. Meanwhile, Haitians are taking the law into their own hands by establishing self-defense groups; some have turned into vigilantes that are no better than the gangs they are meant to fight. If Haiti hasn't reached anarchy, then it's close. What responsibility does Washington, D.C., have to ameliorate these crises? Some will argue a lot. After all, most of the firearms that make their way to Mexico and Haiti come from the United States. In the long run, though, the United States can't force foreign governments to change their policies and practices. And that's what's required here.

8 hours ago
Mexican authorities seize nearly 4 million gallons of stolen fuel
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