LEWISTON â The Mainer who was among the closest friends of Alberto Geddis âAlpoâ Martinez said that while the former drug kingpin maintained the new identity given him by the federal witness protection program, he was never really hiding out in the Pine Tree State.
Martinez, who was murdered on Halloween in New York City, traveled widely, hung out with rappers and hip-hop producers, drove fancy cars, frequently cozied up to fashionable women from afar, visited his old haunts in Harlem regularly and was writing his autobiography.
âHe was literally out partying all the time,â said Nik Pappaconstantine, a Portland software engineer who met the man he knew as Abraham Rodriquez soon after the New York City native got out of a supermax federal prison in Colorado and slipped into Maine with a new government-created identity.
For six years, the two worked, traveled and played together across the state and the region, from the VIP sections of Boston nightclubs to dirt bike trails in the Maine woods.
Pappaconstantine said he wants people to see the man he knew even as he grapples with the difficult reality that the generous, fun-loving fellow he hung with was once accused of at least 14 murders during his reign as one of the leading drug kingpins peddling crack cocaine from the Big Apple to the nationâs capital.
Martinez, despite the low profile he kept in his College Street apartment, was a legendary crack trafficker who âgained urban folklore statusâ in the 1980s and 1990s, by unleashing âmuch death and destructionâ and helped turn Harlem âinto the dilapidated community it became several decades ago,â as the New York Amsterdam News, one of the most influential African-American newspapers, put it the other day.
âI have such a hard time putting the two together,â Pappaconstantine said last week after several sleepless nights pondering the strange connection he had with Martinez, a legend whoâs been featured in song and film, but who was also just his pal Abraham, a hardworking construction guy with a sparse apartment in Lewiston.
Martinez, 55, cut a deal with federal prosecutors in the early 1990s, after the FBI caught up with him following a two-year search. In return for giving federal agents the goods on a major dealer in Washington, D.C., Martinez got 35 years in prison, sparing him a possible death sentence.
When he got out in 2015, the federal government kept its share of the deal by handing Martinez a new identity that could have allowed him to live out his life quietly, far from the mean streets where his enemies lurked.
But Martinez never seemed as worried as the government did.
TELLING HIS SECRET
Shortly before Martinez moved out of Maine last month, he phoned the first friend he ever made in the Pine Tree State to tell him they needed to talk.
Pappaconstantine soon found himself sitting in the Lewiston living room of the man heâd known for six years as Abraham Rodriquez.
Pappaconstantine said his friend told him to take out his phone and type in Alpo Martinez.
When he did, Pappaconstantine immediately saw a flood of links to tales of a drug kingpin whoâd murdered people, spent almost a quarter-century behind bars, gained a reputation as a notorious snitch and frolicked with the glitterati of the hip-hop world.
âThis is who I am,â Martinez told Pappaconstantine.
âAbraham, I appreciate that,â Pappaconstantine responded. âItâs a lot to take in.â
Pappaconstantine told his friend theyâd grown up in different worlds, something they long ago recognized and came to appreciate, and what mattered to him was âthatâs not who you are today.â
But when he learned that Martinez had been gunned down outside a Harlem nightclub on Halloween, driving a truck Pappaconstantine helped him buy in Auburn, the two lives his friend had lived came together in a burst of still-unexplained violence.
Pappaconstantine said he recognized from the start that Martinez was no ordinary fellow. He didnât know a lot of things he should have, from banking to technology, and he always had plenty of cash. That he sometimes got unusual celebrity treatment when the two traveled didnât escape his friend either.
But Martinez was fun, friendly and kind, Pappaconstantine said, and the two grew close.
SO A GUY GOES INTO A BANK AND . . .
In 2015, Pappaconstantine worked for a bank in Portland. He was 24 years old.
A guy walked in who was âincredibly outgoingâ and âvery, very nice,â seeking to open the first account of his life at the age of 49.
âI was surprised heâd been alive for so long and never had a bank account,â Pappaconstantine said.
He recalled that Martinez told him, âI never needed one.â
Pappaconstantine helped Abraham Rodriquez â spelled with a Q, not a G as most stories have said, he added â fill out the paperwork, including his Social Security number and other facts that he now realizes were made up for the federal witness protection program. At the time, though, he had no idea there was anything fishy about any of it.
Martinez told him he was new to the state and trying to make some friends.
Since the newcomer seemed âreally charismaticâ and cool, Pappaconstantine agreed to meet that night to play pool in the Old Port section of Portland.
Martinez, living in an extended-stay hotel in South Portland, didnât show up until 20 minutes before the barâs 1 a.m. closing time, he said, but brushed off a suggestion that it was late.
âNo, no, this is when the party starts,â Martinez told his new banker.
Martinez then scanned the room for the most beautiful women present, Pappaconstantine said, and immediately began talking them up.
âHeâd always succeed, 100% of the time,â Pappaconstantine said. âTheyâd immediately fall for him.â
Pappaconstantine said he saw it repeatedly for years.
Martinez would tell the women what he wanted from them, âso straightforward, so bluntâ and heâd tell them, too, that he had no interest in a relationship and no intention of having any sort of exclusive arrangement.
Pappaconstantine said he always felt like if heâd tried the same thing, heâd have gotten slapped.
But, he said, Martinez had a way of charming women.
HOW DID MARTINEZ WIND UP IN LEWISTON?
Former Lewiston Mayor Kaileigh Tara, who lived upstairs from Martinez, wondered last week, âWhy did they pick Lewiston, Maine, of all places?â
It turns out the witness protection program had nothing to do with it.
The program appears to have supplied Martinez with a new identity and turned him loose in Maine to forge a new life. Neither Pappaconstantine nor Martinezâs neighbors in Lewiston ever saw any sign that federal agents were involved with his ongoing life.
Pappaconstantine said that early on, Martinez asked him for help figuring out where he should live.
He said Martinez quizzed him about âcrime rates and stuff like that,â not wanting to land somewhere that might not be safe.
âI told him, âItâs Maine and you donât have to worry,ââ Pappaconstantine said.
Only recently did he realize that perhaps his friend wanted to avoid running across figures from his past.
In any case, Martinez found a âreally cheapâ three-bedroom, first-floor apartment at 169 College St. in Lewiston, his friend said, and grabbed it.
He said Martinez liked the location and the neighbors, plus all the parking available nearby for the many vehicles he had. A side benefit, Pappaconstantine said, were âall the ladies that he met around there.â
All in all, he said, Lewiston proved âeasy and convenient for himâ so he stayed there for six years.
Nothing much ever happened in the neighborhood.
âThe most I ever see around here is drunk college kids,â said neighbor Lance Brown, referring to students from nearby Bates College.
WHY MARTINEZ LEFT MAINE
Pappaconstantine said Martinez hadnât really been hiding in Maine.
He often traveled to New York, Boston and other locales, hanging out with old friends that Pappaconstantine only recently realized were producers, rappers and other major players in the hip-hop world.
Pappaconstantine sometimes went with him, meeting people in the VIP sections of nightclubs that Martinez waltzed into easily, telling his Maine buddy, âI know somebodyâ to explain it.
âBeing from Maine, I had no idea,â Pappaconstantine said.
He said he figured they were just folks Martinez had crossed paths with somewhere. Heâd seen it happen often with folks in Lewiston and Portland, so he didnât think a whole lot about it when they were elsewhere together.
âHe made all these connections constantly,â Pappaconstantine said.
When Martinezâs mother and sister both got cancer a couple of years ago, his desire to visit them regularly began drawing him back to New York City more and more frequently.
Pappaconstantine said that when his friendâs mother was dying, Martinez would fly back every other weekend to spend time with her.
When she died in 2020, he said, that âcompletely crushed himâ and âput him in a really dark, sad place.â
Losing both his mother and his sister in quick succession, he said, seemed to inspire Martinez to try harder to spend time with other family members, including his children. They lived in New York, Pappaconstantine said.
âThat really changed him,â Pappaconstantine said. He said it was like Martinez decided heâd had enough of missing out on so much of his familyâs life.
Martinez decided this year to move to New Jersey, Pappaconstantine said, and began going there more and more. He finally packed up a U-Haul about four weeks ago and left Lewiston, though heâd planned to return this month to ride his motorcycle in Maine.
Pappaconstantine said Martinez clearly kept a lower profile by living in Maine but âhe was never hiding.â
Even so, he said, Martinez must have known âhe was in danger going down thereâ permanently. It was obviously a risk he was willing to run.
Perhaps Martinez was thinking about the course of his life.
Pappaconstantine said that before his friend drove off in his U-Haul, quitting Maine, Martinez took his picture, telling him he might need it for the autobiography he was writing.
WORKING IN MAINE
For a guy who grew rich and powerful selling cocaine, Martinez never had any use for drugs in his own personal life, Pappaconstantine said.
He said Martinez never drank and never took drugs. He wouldnât even touch a gun, Pappaconstantine said, which was odd in Maine.
Martinez worked hard as well, putting in long hours working for a Pepsi distributor and at a Walmart distribution center in Lewiston for a year or two before shifting into the construction business. Pappaconstantine said he still has the hat that Martinez wore to work for Pepsi.
But then he formed his own company, which lasted only a year, cleaning out construction debris to get things spruced up before painters came in on major projects. He kept doing that work until this year, taking pride in never missing a deadline, Pappaconstantine said.
Martinez had a commercial driverâs license and sometimes drove the big 18-wheeler trucks, too.
One time, Pappaconstantine said, they went together on a long trip. Martinez got tired behind the wheel so they pulled over, parking in a strip mall by a T.J. Maxx in Massachusetts to catch some winks before morning.
By the time they woke up, the lot was filling with cars, blocking in the truck somewhat. Pappaconstantine said they spent a long while maneuvering the truck through an obstacle course to reach a different exit and get back on the road.
Martinez was looking at other business opportunities as well.
Pappaconstantine said Martinez had talked with lawyers to find out if he could get into medical marijuana business legally without violating any conditions of his deal with the government. He said Martinez was told he could.
That might have happened, Constantine said, except that his friend never got the chance to proceed with the idea.
HAVING FUN IN MAINE
Pappaconstantine said Martinez always had a lot of money, once loaning him $10,000 in cash and telling him to pay it back when he could.
Like others who knew Martinez in Maine, he wondered where all the money came from, but he decided that it wasnât his business.
Pappaconstantine said he helped Martinez file his 1040 form because âthe man didnât know anything about taxes.â It just listed the income he made for the jobs he held.
He said Martinez had a 2017 Dodge Ram truck for work but he also had a Harley-Davidson motorcycle, a trail bike and many slick cars, often registered in other states and in the names of other people.
He said his friend always had access to the finest things, once sending him a picture of himself in a Rolls Royce in Atlanta, another time showing himself leaping into the ocean from a fancy yacht.
But Martinez didnât mind slumming it either.
Pappaconstantine said when Martinez needed a car for work, they swapped vehicles for about six months, with Martinez driving a beat-up Nissan Frontier while he got behind the wheel of a stylish, new Ford Explorer Platinum.
The two watched movies, played games, had cookouts, made dinners and went out often. Pappaconstantine said his whole family knew Martinez. But, he said, lots of people did. Martinezâs outgoing nature brought him into a wide circle of people from all walks of life.
âHe was inspiring in a lot of ways,â Pappaconstantine said, a role model because he had so much fun without drinking, was âwicked funny,â generous and kind.
âHe was such a character,â he said. âEverybody loved him.â
Martinez, he said, liked to turn up the volume loud when he listened to music or watched his 85-inch television.
SHOCKING NEWS
When he heard from a friend that somebody had shot and killed Martinez while he was driving his Ram truck away from a Harlem nightclub, Pappaconstantine said he felt shell shocked.
He couldnât quite believe it as he read countless news stories about what had happened, none of them especially enlightening.
Pappaconstantine said what struck him is how somebody managed to fire six rounds through the driverâs side window of a moving truck in a close pattern, something heâs pretty sure he couldnât do despite his familiarity with guns. It looked to him like a hit from someone who knows how itâs done.
After learning the true identity of his friend, Pappaconstantine said he recently saw the movie âPaid in Fullâ for the first time because one of its main characters is based on Martinez in his drug empire heyday.
As he watched the mayhem on screen, he said he thought âthis is insane.â
He said he can see that in some ways, Martinez was âa terrible man.â
âIf I didnât know him, Iâd say he deserved it,â Pappaconstantine said.
But, he said, he canât ignore the friend he knew well, a man who had been nothing but fun and kind.
Tara said she could see that Martinez âwas not a very good personâ all along, mostly because of the way he treated women.
At one point, she said, he had a fiancée, but hit on Tara anyway.
She said she told him no, that she was friends with his fiancée.
âYou deserve to be loved,â Martinez responded.
âYes, I do,â Tara answered. âBut not by you.â
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