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Leader of Nine-Three Bloods Sentenced to 27 Years in Federal Prison
Family Held Hostage at Gunpoint During Home Invasion Robbery
NEWARK—A ranking member of the Nine-Three set of the Bloods was sentenced today
to 27 years in federal prison for a 2006 armed home-invasion robbery in Newark, Acting
U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr., announced.
U.S. District Judge Stanley R. Chesler sentenced Stanley Foote, 29, of Newark, to the
statutory maximum of 20 years in prison for convictions related to the conspiracy and the
attempt to commit the armed robbery of drugs and money. He was sentenced to an
additional mandatory minimum of seven years, to run consecutively, for his conviction on
a charge of carrying and brandishing a weapon during the attempted robbery (the weapon
was actually carried by an accomplice, but Foote was equally responsible under the law).
On Feb. 20, a jury convicted Foote of one count of conspiracy to commit a Hobbs Act
robbery, one count of attempted robbery and one count of possession and brandishment of
a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence. He was acquitted of one additional
weapons count.
The case arose from an investigation by Special Agents of the FBI into a narcotics
trafficking ring led by Foote and members of the Nine-Three set of the Bloods, of which
Foote is a status member.
Evidence at trial revealed that at approximately 11 p.m. on Aug. 23, 2006, Waleak
Chandler climbed through the front porch window of the single family house on Lincoln
Avenue armed with a gun, and ordered the victims, including four children, onto the
floor. Chandler then opened the front door to allow Foote in, and Foote immediately ran
up the stairs to the second floor. Chandler proceeded to hold the victims at gunpoint and
ripped out the phone cords located in the dining room and kitchen so that the police could
not be called. Meanwhile, Foote ransacked an upstairs bedroom looking for heroin,
cocaine and cash in that bedroom. A short time later, both Chandler and Foote fled the
home empty-handed.
Manning, 27, of Newark, who testified for the government, said she scouted out the
location for the robbery and alerted the defendants to her belief that cocaine, heroine and
cash would be found in the house.
Chandler, 26, also of Newark, and Manning pleaded guilty prior to trial to conspiracy to
commit armed robbery. Manning was sentenced on April 2 to five years of probation, in
which her cooperation and testimony at trial was taken into consideration. Chandler is
scheduled to be sentenced on July 7.
The case has been prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Melissa L. Jampol and Michael
H. Robertson.
Marra credited Special Agents of the FBI and the FBI Safe Streets Gang Task Force,
comprised of agents and law enforcement from federal, state and local agencies, including
the Newark and Irvington Police Departments, with the investigation and prosecution of
Foote, his co-defendants and others. Press Releases | Newark Home
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