Terry Flenory (Southwest T) is a convicted drug trafficker and an active Black Mafia Family (BMF) member. If you haven’t heard about the BMF, you are in the right place right. All information you need about Terry, his brother (Big Meech), and their organization is right here.
The duo was arrested in 2005 and convicted in 2007. Although, in 2020, Terry was released from jail and was confined at home due to the pandemic that broke out. Meech is still in prison, serving his sentence.
Demetrius Flenory (also called Big Meech) was born on 21 June 1968, whereas Terry Lee Flenory (Southwest T) was born on 10 January 1970 in Michigan. The brothers began selling contraband in Detroit when they were still in High School. In 2000, they had established an organization that sells and distributes contraband in the US states like North Carolina, Florida, California, Alabama, Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Ohio. An investigation of their organization estimated its membership nationwide as more than 500.

Top 10 facts about Terry Lee Flenory
- Terry Flenory was born on 10 January 1970. He is 52 in 2022.
- His zodiac sign is Capricorn.
- He has American citizenship but he is of Black ethnicity.
- His nickname is Southwest T and he was a drug dealer and co-founder of the Black Mafia Family.
- Southwest T was arrested and convicted by the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) in 2007 but was granted a compassionate release during the covid-19 pandemic.
- He had a girlfriend named Welch, who was also sentenced to prison because his crimes implicated her.
- He co-founded an entertainment industry known as BMF Entertainment, promoting famous artists like Diddy, Trina, T.I., Shawty Lo, Jay-Z, and Fabolous.
- Because of his involvement with drugs, he had a lot of rivals. There was a time unidentified shooters shot him, and he was in his eyes, but the extent of the damage is still unknown.
- He is active on Instagram as @Southwest263 and he has 248k followers.
- Demetrius (known as Big Meech) is his brother and they started selling drugs from high school.
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Black Mafia Family (BMF)
Black Mafia Family (BMF) is an organization founded by Demetrius, also known as Big Meech, and his brother, Terry Flenory, also known as Southwest T. BMF is a money laundering and drug trafficking organization. The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) claims to have dismantled it in 2005. In 2000, they established the sales and distribution of contraband through their sources in Los Angeles. They also had a direct link with Mexican drug cartels. The organization had two hubs: one in Los Angeles to handle incoming shipments from Mexico, headed by Terry Flenory, and distribution run by Demetrius Flenory.
They also established a hip-hop music brand in the early 2000s known as BMF Entertainment as a cover to disguise their main illegal business. It was also an attempt to create a legal firm and source of income when inquisitions began. The entertainment business promoted famous artists like Jay-Z, Diddy, Trina, Fabolous, Shawty Lo, T.I., etc., but Bleu DaVinci was their sole artist.

Black Mafia Family
The brothers began selling illegal substances in Detroit when they were in High School. By 2000, they had an organization that sells and distributes contraband in the US. The duo ran operations in states like North Carolina, Florida, California, Alabama, Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Ohio. Authorities estimated that about 500 people were members of the Black Mafia Family.
In 2003, the two brothers began to have issues, which affected the organization. Terry had to relocate to Los Angeles to lead his organization while Demetrius remained in Atlanta, where distribution took place. The bad blood grew so intense that the communication between them reduced immensely. In a discussion captured on a wiretap by DEA, Terry was worried because his brother Demetrius was living an extravagant lifestyle, partying around, which would bring the wrong attention to them, which could, in turn, ruin them. Within five months, the government had 900 pages of typed transcripts of wiretapped conversations from Terry’s phone and filed charges against them.
In 2007, the duo pleaded guilty to the charges filed against them, and in 2008, the judge sentenced them to 30 years imprisonment for operating a drug-trafficking business that spanned from 2000-to 2005. While Demetrius is serving his sentence in Federal Correctional Institution, Sheridan, Terry was released in May 2020, during the covid-19 pandemic. He was granted a compassionate release due to health reasons, and the government was making an effort to reduce the spread of covid-19 among inmates. Although Demetrius also sought his release following the same guideline, the judge rejected the application for release due to his prison record, which suggested that he had not changed much. For example, he was still allegedly promoting himself as a king in the contraband industry. The prison records also stated that the prison warder caught Demetrius with a phone, weapons, and illegal drugs.
Mara Shalhoup, a senior editor at Creative Loafing, wrote a series on the Black Mafia Family, the first in-depth report on the organization. His books The rise and fall of Big Meech and The Black Mafia Family were published in 2010.
How did the government stop them?
A wiretapped conversation from a drug dealer in Atlanta led the task force to an amateur dealer Decarlo Hoskins. Hoskins disclosed that he knew two brothers – Omari McCree and Jeffrey Leahr – he grew up with who are also active members of the BMF and regularly supplied a large quantity of contraband. The wiretap further disclosed that Omari McCree got preferential treatment from Demetrius because he was a high-level distributor. In 2004, enforcement agents pulled over Jeffrey Leahr and his girlfriend. They found a bag containing 10kg of contraband with them; although Jeffrey and his girlfriend were later released, they got into massive debt due to the cocaine lost to the enforcement agents and went on the run.
During the different trials, witnesses gave various testimonies; some said that BMF operated in five houses in Atlanta and sent out 100-150kg of well-packaged contraband every 10 days in separate compartments in a vehicle to locations where paid workers would unpack and store them. Then, buyers would make arrangements to pick up their orders via calls. They alleged that individuals made payments on delivery with a kg costing as high as $20k. After delivering ‘goods’ to the customers, the proceeds from the business would be packaged in a vehicle and sent back to the supply sources.
According to testimonies, the workers had different duties; while some counted cash, others packaged the illegal substance. Some members even helped collect the drugs at various airports.
In October 2005, the DEA carried out an intense drug raid leading to the arrest of 30 alleged BMF members and seizure of 2.5kg contraband, $3 million in cash and assets, and weapons.
Before the raid mentioned above, agents had picked up about 17 members of the organization and seized 632kg of cocaine, $5.7 million in assets, and $5.3 million (cash).
Big Meech and Southwest T arrests
The DEA captured Demetrius in a suburb outside Dallas, and they found marijuana and a few MDMA pills on him. In addition, they found several weapons and many vehicles. Agents arrested Terry in St. Louis, and there were marijuana, guns, and several other occupants with him.
In July 2007, the government charged 16 members of the BMF in Atlanta for conspiracy in drug distribution. The charge carried a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years imprisonment and a maximum of life imprisonment, alongside a $4 million fine. While all defendants pleaded guilty to the charge, only one person didn’t; his name was Fleming Daniels.
Fleming Daniels
Fleming Daniels, a top member of the Black Mafia Family, was eventually sentenced to 20 years imprisonment on 17 December 2008 for drug trafficking. The judge further fined him $10k for partaking in violent group activities. Although enforcement agencies did not see him with weapons or illegal substances, the prosecution relied on the testimony against him by William Doc Marshall and Ralph Simms. The witnesses said they had seen him several times receiving drugs in kilograms. Daniel also got convicted for the murder of one Rashannibal Drummond. Faced with these damning charges, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for manslaughter, after which he will serve another 20 years for his involvement with the BMF family.




