Philly Daily ran my Crime Beat column on the Born To Kill gangster joining the FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitive List.
You can read the column via the link below or the following text:
Davis: ‘Born to Kill’ gangster joins FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitives list - Philly Daily
One suspected member of the notorious “Born To Kill” gang, also known as the BTK gang, recently made the big-time as the FBI named hm to the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives List. The FBI is offering $1 million dollars for information leading to his arrest.
According to
the FBI’s Philadelphia Field Office and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Trung Duc Lu is wanted in connection with the August
2014 torture, kidnapping, and murder of two Vietnamese brothers who’d engaged
in drug dealing in Philadelphia. Lu also allegedly took part in the torture and
attempted murder of a third victim - the brothers’ friend and fellow dealer,
called Sonny by the FBI, who worked with the authorities after surviving the
incident.
Lu, a U.S.
permanent resident who never pursued U.S. citizenship, is believed to have fled
the United States for his home country of Vietnam.
“Adding
Trung Lu to the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list reflects the seriousness
of his alleged crimes and our unwavering commitment to bringing him to
justice,” said FBI Philadelphia Special Agent in Charge Wayne A. Jacobs. “The
FBI and our partners will continue to leverage every available resource—both
here at home and abroad—to locate and apprehend him. No matter how much time
passes or where he attempts to hide, the FBI will continue pursuing him until
he is found and taken into custody."
According to
FBI Philadelphia Special Agent Scott Baber, the lead investigator on Lu’s case,
Lu’s apprehension would end a 12-year quest for justice for his alleged victims,
whom Baber noted, had wives, friends, and jobs beyond their criminal activity.
“They were
people who, in many ways, were trying to live the American dream,” said Baber.
“They were certainly flawed characters and broke the law, but their
transgressions should not have resulted in them meeting the kind of end that
they did.”
The FBI said
at the heart of the announcement is rooted in large-scale marijuana
distribution between New York City and Philadelphia. Three Philadelphia drug
dealers - two brothers and their friend - would get large amounts of the drug
from a large, New York-based distributor on consignment. The idea was that they
could resell the marijuana at a higher price than what they owed the
distributor and still turn a profit once they paid them back. The trio soon
started gambling the money they owed their source up north. This led their
suppliers to deploy individuals to recoup the stolen funds.
The FBI
explained that in August 2014, Trung Duc Lu and others were allegedly sent from
New York City to Philadelphia to find the dealers and recoup the debt, which
Baber said exceeded $100,000. When the men reached Philadelphia, they
reportedly met up with Tam Le, a local point of contact who knew the victims
from the drug business. Tam Le then reportedly lured each of the men to a house
in Southwest Philadelphia, one by one.
“When they
arrived at his residence in Southwest Philadelphia, each one was attacked, tied
up, and savagely beaten in an attempt to extract the money,” Baber said. “And
each person was forced to call the next person. Ultimately, all three victims
were tied up inside this family's garage in Southwest Philadelphia.”
The FBI
stated that Lu and his co-conspirators collected some of the missing money and
then murdered the three men. The BTK gangsters left the house and transported
the three murder victims in a van.
“They then
arrived at a parking lot on the Schuylkill River, pulled each victim out of the
van, stabbed each one viciously, tied them down with weighted buckets, and
threw them into the river,” Baber said.
“Miraculously,
after being mistaken for dead, Sonny escaped the river and flagged down a
motorist who dialed 9-1-1 and triggered a police response,” Baber said.
The FBI
stated that Sinny’s statement provided to the Philadelphia Police Department
enabled the authorities to obtain a search warrant for Tam Le’s residence. The
ensuing search turned up evidence of torture, and a later search of the river
led to the recovery of the other victims’ bodies.
“Le was
eventually indicted in Philadelphia, captured by the U.S. Marshals Service in
2015, convicted in 2016, and sentenced to death,” Baber said. “The FBI opened
an investigation into the incident around 2018, since the Bureau believed the
circumstances of the alleged crime and evidence recovered suggested a nexus
with organized crime,” Baber said.
“But Sonny
hadn’t been able to identify any of his other attackers, since they’d been
hidden behind masks, and there was also no forensic evidence left behind that
could be attributed to the subjects,” Baber recalled.
In May 2017,
Baber and his co-case agent traveled to New York City and interviewed someone
who confirmed that Lu owned that phone number. Records indicated that Lu fled
the country soon after on a flight to Vietnam. “We believe that he’s there
today,” Baber said.
“He was on
the run from a drug cartel and had been involved in massive drug trafficking,”
Baber explained, “So he hoped to trade assistance for protection. The
co-conspirator signed a plea agreement with the FBI, and his cooperation
resulted in the federal indictment of the remaining subjects, including Lu. Lu
is the only person who's not been held accountable for his involvement in the
crime, and
that's where
we are today,” Baber said.
According to
the FBI, Trung Duc Lu was born in Vietnam. He and his mother came to the U.S.
as refugees when he was a teen, settling in New York City’s Queens borough.
However, his criminal record began soon after.
“BTK had its
origins in New York City, in the Chinatown area, going all the way back to the
1980s and ’90s,” Baber said. “A series of large federal indictments really
crippled the organization.” However, one of Lu’s BTK associates is believed to
have dispatched him to Philadelphia to commit his alleged crimes.
Lu is 5’7”
tall, with black hair and brown eyes. He’s also extensively tattooed on his
back, both of his arms, and the left side of his chest. He’s a nail technician,
by profession, and speaks English and Vietnamese.
Although
he’s believed to be in Vietnam, Baber explained, Lu still has ties to the U.S -
including children he had with a woman here.
And as a
Vietnamese national, his status as a U.S. permanent resident still entitles him
to due process rights under American law.
The FBI says
that anyone with information about Lu and/or his whereabouts should call
1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or online at tips.fbi.gov.
Paul Davis’s Crime Beat column appears here each week. He is also a contributor to Broad + Liberty and Counterterrorism magazine. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.
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