Book Details
Sergeant Smack: The Legendary Lives and Times of Ike Atkinson, Kingpin, and His Band
of Brothers
Sergeant
Smack
chronicles
the
story
of
North
Carolina’s
Leslie
“Ike”
Atkinson,
an
adventurer,
gambler
and
one
of
U.S.
history’s
most
original
gangsters.
Under
the
cover
of
the
Vietnam
War
and
through
the
use
of
the
U.S.
military
infrastructure,
Atkinson
masterminded
an
enterprising
group
of
family
members
and
former
African
American
GIs
that
the
DEA
identified
as
one
of
history’s
ten top drug trafficking rings. Ike’s organization moved heroin from Thailand to North Carolina and beyond.
According
to
law
enforcement
sources,
1,000
pounds
is
a
conservative
estimate
of
the
amount
of
heroin
the
ring
transported
annually
from
Bangkok,
Thailand,
through
U.S.
military
bases,
into
the
U.S.
during
its
period
of
operation
from
1968
to
1975.
That
amount translates to about $400 million worth of illegal drug sales during that period.
Born
in
Goldsboro,
North
Carolina,
Ike
Atkinson
is
a
charismatic
former
U.S.
Army
Master
Sergeant,
career
drug
smuggler,
scam
artist,
card
shark
and
doting
family
man
whom
law
enforcement
nick-named
Sergeant
Smack.
He
was
never
known
to
carry
a
gun,
and
today
many
retired
law
enforcement
officials
who
had
put
him
in
jail
refer
to
him
as
a
“gentleman.”
Sergeant
Smack’s
criminal
activities
sparked
the
creation
of
a
special
DEA
unit
code
named
CENTAC
9,
which
conducted
an
intensive
three-year
investigation
across three continents. Sergeant Smack was elusive, but the discovery of his palm print on a kilo of heroin finally took him down.
In
1987,
Ike
tried
to
revive
his
drug
ring
from
Otisville
Federal
Penitentiary,
but
the
Feds
discovered
the
plot
and
set
up
a
sting.
The
events
that
follow
seem
like
the
narrative
for
a
Robert
Ludlum
novel.
Atkinson
was
convicted
again
and
nine
years
added
to
his
sentence.
Ike
was
released
from
prison
in
2006
after
serving
a
31-year
jail
sentence.
Atkinson’s
story
is
controversial
because
his
ring
has
been
accused
of
smuggling
heroin
to
the
U.S.
in
the
coffins
and/or
cadavers
of
dead
American
GIs.
As
this
book
shows,
the
accusation is completely false.
The
recent
movie,
“American
Gangster,”
which
depicted
the
criminal
career
of
Frank
Lucas,
distorted
Atkinson’s
historical
role
in
the
international
drug
trade.
Sergeant
Smack
exposes
the
lies
about
the
Ike
Atkinson-Frank
Lucas
relationship
and
documents
how
Ike,
not Lucas, pioneered the Asian heroin connection.