The actions of former Baltimore police Sergeant Wayne Jenkins and his staff of plain-clothed officers within the Gun Hint Job Drive (GTTF) are explored in We Personal This Metropolis.

HBO's new true-crime drama stars Jon Bernthal as Jenkins, with the present inspecting Jenkins' rise within the metropolis's police division and eventual arrest after a two-year federal investigation into the GTTF.

Right here is every thing that you must learn about the true Jenkins and the place he's now.

The place Is Former Sergeant Wayne Jenkins Now?

Wayne Jenkins and Jon Bernthal
L-R: Former Baltimore police Sergeant Wayne Jenkins, and Jon Bernthal as Jenkins in HBO true-crime drama "We Personal This Metropolis."Paul Schiraldi/Baltimore Police Division/HBO

Jenkins joined Baltimore's police division in 2003, first turning into a beat cop and patrolling the streets of Baltimore.

Throughout his time on the streets of Baltimore Jenkins was concerned in a number of arrests that resulted within the accidents of the individuals he took into custody.

In Justin Fenton's e book We Personal This Metropolis, on which the HBO sequence relies, the Baltimore Solar journalist defined that Jenkins would typically be "caught in a lie" whereas giving proof to a jury, however no complaints have been placed on his file.

For instance, in January 2006, Jenkins and Sergeant Michael Fries had an altercation with brothers Charles and Robert Lee after they continued to drink beer on the entrance step of their grandmother's residence when the policemen had advised them to cease.

Throughout the altercation, a passerby named George Sneed was assaulted by officer Robert Cirello who broke his jaw, main Sneed to sue.

On the trial 4 years later, Jenkins and his fellow officers claimed that the witness had been throwing bottles at them, however safety digital camera footage proven on the trial proved what Jenkins claimed was not true.

Sneed's legal professional Michael Pulver concluded, per Fenton, that the officers had "fabricated this story to cover the truth that they deliberately assaulted and falsely arrested and imprisoned Mr. Sneed."

Regardless of this taking place greater than as soon as, Jenkins remained in his superiors' good books and when Fries was promoted in 2007 he determined to additionally give Jenkins a lift as a result of he was "the perfect officer [he] had working below [his] command."

It was in 2007 that Jenkins grew to become part of the GTTF, a brand new unit of plain-clothed officers targeted on concentrating on suspected criminals believed to have massive provides of weapons and medicines, in a bid to scale back town's excessive homicide fee.

Nevertheless, the give attention to amount slightly than high quality led Jenkins and the seven different GTTF officers to start out planting proof, take cash from the properties they invaded, and even resell the medicine they seized again onto the streets.

A two-year federal investigation into the GTTF resulted in all eight officers, and one Philadelphia officer, getting charged with a number of offenses, together with racketeering, in 2017.

In February 2017, Jenkins was charged with two counts of racketeering conspiracy; racketeering, aiding and abetting; racketeering; two counts of theft and aiding and abetting; and two counts of possession of a firearm in furtherance of against the law of violence.

Then, in November 2017, he was given additional prices of destruction, alteration or falsification of data in federal investigations, and deprivation of rights below coloration of regulation.

When his case went to trial on January 5, 2018 Jenkins pled responsible to at least one rely of racketeering, two counts of theft, one rely of destruction, alteration, or falsification of data in a federal investigation, and 4 counts of deprivation of rights below coloration of regulation.

Jenkins was given a 25-year jail sentence on June 7, 2018, which he's presently within the midst of serving at a federal jail in Kentucky.

In September 2021, Jenkins spoke with BBC journalist Jessica Lussenhop from behind bars, and he claimed he by no means took cash from Baltimore residents.

Jenkins stated: "I by no means had [theft complaints] as a result of I by no means took cash off people. I did give medicine to Donny [Stepp, who testified he and Jenkins sold $1 million worth of narcotics] for the final couple of years I used to be police, however I did not take individuals's cash as a result of then they might know you have been soiled."

Explaining the techniques of the GTTF, he additionally advised the publication: "This can be a saying we state: 'Do not let possible trigger stand in the way in which of a very good arrest.'

"If you have to lie about what you have seen or what you heard or what you witnessed, so long as he is soiled, he is obtained the medicine and he is obtained the weapons and he did the crime—simply get him."

We Personal This Metropolis airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO.