Alpo Martinez

Alpo Martinez
Born Alberto Geddis Martinez
(1966-06-08) June 8, 1966
Harlem, New York, U.S.
Other names Alpo
Mayor of Harlem
Occupation drug dealer
Criminal penalty 35 year sentence
Conviction(s) 14 counts of homicide

Alberto Geddis "Alpo" Martinez (born June 8, 1966) is a Puerto Rican former drug dealer who rose to prominence alongside Azie Faison and Rich Porter in the mid 1980s in Harlem during the War on Drugs. He went on to expand to his drug trade to other parts of New York City, and to other cities in the Northeast, notably Washington D.C. He is serving a 35-year sentence for 14 counts of homicide at ADX Florence, a federal supermax prison located in Fremont County, Colorado

Life

Martinez started selling drugs as early as 13 years old in East Harlem. When he met West side Harlem drug dealer Azie Fasion,[1] Alpo started to move up the chain of drug dealers in Harlem and eventually became one of the biggest drug dealers in NYC. he later moved to Washington D.C. to expand operations where he quickly became involved in the underworld in the city and began drug dealing again. He met Wayne 'Silk' Perry, a notorious gangster and D.C. enforcer, who would later become his bodyguard and hitman.[2] On January 3, 1990, Martinez and an accomplice murdered Rich Porter in The Bronx, New York, shooting the victim in the head and body several times. Martinez and Porter had previously been associates who sold drugs together. He has since apologized to the Porter family for the murder.

Arrest

In 1991, he was arrested in Washington D.C. for selling drugs. He was later charged with conspiracy to commit murder, various drug charges, and 14 counts of murder, including the murder of D.C drug dealer Michael Fray [3] and Brooklyn drug dealer Demencio Benson.[4] Facing the possibility of either the death penalty or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, Martinez turned informant and testified against members of his organization.[5] For his testimony against Perry (who received five consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole), Martinez was sentenced to 35 years in prison.[6]

Pop culture

The 2002 film Paid In Full was based on Martinez, Faison and Porter.[7][8]

Martinez is referenced in the song Memory Lane (Sittin' In Da Park) by hip hop artist Nas on his debut album Illmatic (1994), "Uptown was Alpo son, heard he was kingpin yo."

Martinez was also referenced in the song "My Life" by gangster rap artist The Game, on his third studio album "LAX" (2008), "I'm 'Paid in Full', the ***** Alpo couldn't stop that."

(2016), Martinez alleged son, Randy aka,(Popperazzi po),came out publicly in a interview with a Chicago-based reporter letting the world know the hardships of growing up in the shadow of the legacy.

References

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