There were no controlled substances ingested in the presence of Ed, nor did Ed give any to his friend.' 'It seems the individual came over already having consumed controlled substances. He had him come over and come into his apartment,' Amster told on Monday, hours after the death, adding - without naming Mr Dean - that he had died inside the home. Ed was reluctant to have him over but he was insistent. 'Unfortunately in the early hours this morning, a good friend of Ed's reached out to him. Interracial flings were a common theme in Dean's work, with him often engaged with smaller white men who were enamored with his large stature.ĭean's tattoos on his arms can be seen in various clips.īuck's attorney, Seymour Amster, said Dean was a long-time friend of Buck's and claimed that he had 'a history of substance abuse.' Published: 09:23 BST, 10 January 2019 | Updated: 21:52 BST, 10 January 2019īuck, a prominent Democratic donor who gave to Hillary Clinton's campaign, is now under investigation over the deaths of both Mr Dean and 26-year-old Gemmel Moore 18 months ago
“I feel vindicated because they listened to us,” Dane Brown, 39, who testified at the trial, said in an interview after the conviction, adding, “All I could do was just cry.” Buck, who is white, were Black men, including Mr. The conviction is a significant turning point in a saga that led to protests from people arguing he should have been charged sooner and accusing him of preying on gay Black men.Ī majority of the 11 victims named in the charges filed against Mr. Buck would either reduce their pay or not pay them at all. Buck’s apartment, the statement said, he would prepare syringes containing methamphetamine, sometimes personally injecting the men without their consent - sometimes while they were unconscious. Buck “exploited” his victims by paying them to take drugs in his home.