Flippa Mafia is back in US custody on drug conspiracy charges.

Flippa Mafia is back in custody for alleged drug charges. Four years after US Federal authorities released Flippa Mafia from prison, where he served time for drug trafficking, he is back in custody for alleged drug charges.

Flippa Mafia is back in custody for alleged drug charges. Four years after US Federal authorities released Flippa Mafia from prison, where he served time for drug trafficking, he is back in custody for alleged drug charges.

Flippa Mafia, whose real name is Andrew Kendrick Davis, is a Jamaican dancehall artist. Federal authorities in New Jersey have charged him in a federal drug conspiracy case. The authorities have also named three co-defendants. They are Damion Jones, Clifford Brown, and James McBride.

The allegation claims that the four men conspired to possess and distribute at least 500 grams of a substance containing a detectable amount of methamphetamine, at least 400 grams of fentanyl, and at least five kilograms of cocaine between August 2025 and May 2026.

During the investigation, a judge approved intercepting communications from two of Davis’s phones. The criminal complaint uncovered intriguing conversations between Davis and an unidentified woman, along with discussions involving his co-defendants.

On May 9, 2026, law enforcement officers observed a U.S. Postal Service worker delivering a package that had been mailed from California five days earlier to an address under surveillance. A subsequent raid resulted in the arrest of one of the co-defendants and the recovery of 10 pounds of suspected methamphetamine and two kilograms of suspected cocaine.

Further raids followed, resulting in the arrests of Davis’ co-defendants and the seizure of additional evidence.

Flippa Mafia, appeared before US Magistrate Judge Ann Marie Donio on Monday. He remains in custody of the United States Marshal until a bail hearing on May 14 in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey.

Davis served several years in prison following a 2016 conviction in a major U.S. drug trafficking and money laundering. The judge sentenced him to 25 years. He was released in 2022.

Police Charged a Man and Woman for Attempting to Smuggle Cigarettes into Annotto Bay Lock-Up

On Tuesday, police in Annotto Bay, St Mary, charged two suspects for allegedly attempting to smuggle contraband into the police lock-up.

The authorities have identified the suspects. They are Ikyalia Richards, 19, a hairstylist from Heywood Hall, St. Mary. And Romero Forbes, a construction worker from Ebony Hall, Highgate, in St Mary.

According to the police, officers on duty at the station observed suspicious activities involving the two suspects. During their investigation, they saw inmates pulling an object through a cell window.

The object allegedly fell to the ground. Officers went to retrieve the object and found a transparent plastic bag containing six cigarettes.

Law enforcement officers later apprehended and charged the two suspects.

Investigators said a third suspect escaped from the scene.

The investigation is ongoing.

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