The reputed head of the infamous Shower Posse criminal
organization Vivian Blake is to be deported to Jamaica by the end of this week.
The 53 year old who is now in a US hospital being treated for an undisclosed medical condition was released from Federal prison Sunday after serving an 8 year sentence for criminal conspiracy.
The aging gangster who operated one of the most powerful criminal empires that spanned the United States, Canada and Britain, was released from the confines of a prison.
The shower posse unleashed terror wherever they operated and is reported to have murdered more than 1400 persons in the US.
Blake, who's also an alleged drug kingpin spent over one hundred months in federal confinement after inking a plea deal with US authorities.
By the end of this week, Blake will walk on Jamaican soil for the first time in 8 years after being extradited to the US in 1999.
His attorney David P. Rowe told RJR news that preparations for his return are being made by US marshals.
"At some point the US marshals will give him over to the Homeland security for travel to Jamaica" he said.
Blake who served part of his sentence at prisons in Florida and New Jersey, was at the medical centre for federal prisoners in Springfield Missouri.
Mr. Rowe said his client is expecting to return to a normal life in Jamaica and will not face criminal prosecutions for activities that occurred prior to his imprisonment.
The 53 year old who is now in a US hospital being treated for an undisclosed medical condition was released from Federal prison Sunday after serving an 8 year sentence for criminal conspiracy.
The aging gangster who operated one of the most powerful criminal empires that spanned the United States, Canada and Britain, was released from the confines of a prison.
The shower posse unleashed terror wherever they operated and is reported to have murdered more than 1400 persons in the US.
Blake, who's also an alleged drug kingpin spent over one hundred months in federal confinement after inking a plea deal with US authorities.
By the end of this week, Blake will walk on Jamaican soil for the first time in 8 years after being extradited to the US in 1999.
His attorney David P. Rowe told RJR news that preparations for his return are being made by US marshals.
"At some point the US marshals will give him over to the Homeland security for travel to Jamaica" he said.
Blake who served part of his sentence at prisons in Florida and New Jersey, was at the medical centre for federal prisoners in Springfield Missouri.
Mr. Rowe said his client is expecting to return to a normal life in Jamaica and will not face criminal prosecutions for activities that occurred prior to his imprisonment.