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The Chief, the Sergeant and Their Nephew
How Jasdrual "Josh" Perez's dark path into alleged drug dealing triggered a federal investigation and distressed the lives around him —including his uncles, Providence Police Chief Oscar Perez and Sergeant Andres Perez, and his rising star former girlfriend, Carolina Correa.
July 29, 2024
John Doherty
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Photo illustration by Dana Smith. Photo courtesy of the Rhode Island State Police.
Update: According to the Boston Globe, Perez plead guilty on Wednesday, July 31, to “conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to deliver 400 grams or more of fentanyl.”
Josh Perez sees himself as a thinking-man’s drug dealer, according to federal wiretap transcripts.
He doesn’t sell drugs to users — he supplies other dealers, say law enforcement officers, who claim the deliveries are worth six figures a pop. He keeps his ten-man crew well-paid and brags he never touches the stuff, according to wiretap transcripts. No guns, no tattoos, no amateur Instagram videos of him and his crew flashing gang signs. No, Jasdrual “Josh” Perez reads Business Insider and likes to watch inspirational TED talks online.
He just handles the money.
And he’s smart with all that money.Several properties are held in the names of family members,but federal agents contend Josh paid for them. There is a handsome Federal-style home in Alpine Estates in Cranston with a brick face, four bedrooms, four baths and a sweet in-ground pool out back. It’s worth close to $1 million, and in his mother’s name. A few years ago, he pumped $350,000 cash into a new marijuana dispensary in Massachusetts, according to wiretap conversations, and became a silent partner in the legit side of the business.
He could walk away from the game anytime, he says. Only in his early thirties, he says he’s proud of himself, and blessed.
Several years ago, he was caught saying all of this on a federal wiretap, while laying it all out for a colleague:
“Dude, I sell drugs because I like this shit, dude,” he said. “The business part of it is all worked out, all worked out … ’cause I made my capital, thanks to my God, understand man? I’m not out on the streets grinding no more.
“I’m badass.”
On the street, he boasted abouttrips to Colombia, and implied he benefited from family ties to the Providence Police Department,according to federal wiretaps and a police source. He rocked khakis and sport coats. He’s a gym rat with a chiseled physique who meditates every morning, says a source close to the family. He cultivated an air of calm, quiet self-assurance. He came across as connected, hooked-up and untouchable.
His uncle, Oscar Perez, on the other hand, is a rare and particular type of cop. At fifty-four, he’s the Providence chief of police and a champion of community policing’s core principles: empathy, compassion, knowing what your communities need from police.
Oscar,a Colombian immigrant, is from Medellín, Colombia.He came to Elma Street in South Providence with his dad, Oscar Sr., in 1982. He was thirteen, didn’t speak English and the poor, tough neighborhood around him was being torn apart by gangs and the emerging crack epidemic.
The Medellín he and his father left was an even bigger nightmare. Exploding in population, slums had sprouted like mushrooms around the city, just as Pablo Escobar’s Medellín Cartel was turning it into the cocaine and murder capital of the world.
Today, Oscar Perez has degrees from Roger Williams University and Boston University and is a graduate of a certificate program from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. He’s sought after at law enforcement conferences all over the country and has traded ideas with cops from as far away as his hometown of Medellín at the FBI Academy at Quantico, Virginia.
He’s soft-spoken, a listener. He isn’t quick to anger, say those who know him. He was a standout soccer player at Central High School and boxed as a kid. Like a lot of fighters, he still radiates the easy-going confidence of a guy with nothing to prove.
He joined the Providence Police in 1994 and worked his way up. He’s had just about every post he could have in more than thirty years with the department: street cop, sergeant, patrol commander, internal affairs, gang unit, community outreach, parole board, captain, major, deputy chief. Finally, chief.