Essay On Rick Ross

721 Words2 Pages

“There is an intellectual distinction between a gangster in a business environment and a businessman in a gangster environment,” says Ross (Ross 74). 'Freeway’ Rick Ross grew up illiterate, living on the streets with rough gangs, and in impoverished neighborhoods where violence and drugs were on the rise. Rick goes into the drug business. Danilo Brandon became Rick’s main drug supplier and his downfall. Blandon had been more than Rick’s connection: He belonged to a ring of exiled Nicaraguans with ties to the Contras, the CIA-backed guerrilla army fighting a civil war in the name of anticommunism (Katz). Unbeknownst to him, he possibly ended up a pawn in a United States government conspiracy to trade drugs for guns during the Iran-Contra affair (Moore). Regardless, Freeway Rick Ross went from being one of the largest crack cocaine dealers in the eighties to prison in the nineties to fund raiser and legal entrepreneur today. Rick Ross and his mother moved to South Central, the roughest part of Los Angeles in 1964 when he four years old (Katz). Even though his mother worked, she still relied on food stamps to raise Rick. He never liked food stamps and vowed to earn enough money so that he never had to use them. Rick recalls, “Many kids were forced to grow up and become street-smart fast, because it was so violent in the …show more content…

However, it was the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency that finally arrested him in 1989. After serving five years in prison, he was released in 1994 (Katz). Even though, he was ready to get out of the cocaine business, his biggest supplier talked him into one last deal. Danilo Blandon agreed to work with federal agents to set up Rick. Ross was sentenced to life in prison without parole in 1996 (Kaplan). While in prison, Rick learned how to read and found a loophole that reduced his sentence from life to 14 years (Ross

Open Document