The “Hammah” and his attorney get hammered as the Miske Enterprise case winds down

The hearing for the sentencing of Lance Bermudez, the last of about 18 co-defendants and associates of the late Michael J. Miske, Jr., was held on Monday morning, July 14, 2025, in the federal courtroom of Chief Judge Derrick Watson. It was five years, almost to the day, since a grand jury indictment was unsealed and Miske was arrested in a pre-dawn raid on July 15, 2020, and co-defendants tracked down.

With strong words for the defendant and his attorney, Watson sentenced Bermudez to a total of 30 years in federal prison. Nearly 20 family members and friends sat quietly in the courtroom as the sentence was announced.

Bermudez’s sentencing marked the end of the case that broke up a racketeering organization controlled and directed by Michael J. Miske, Jr. who, over the course of two decades, grew from a runaway kid from Waimanalo living on the streets in Kailua into a prolific car thief and drug dealer, and over time into a widely feared crime boss who owned multiple well-known businesses, several homes, and a luxury home in Portlock overlooking the ocean, as well as a reputation for violence that silenced critics, scared off business competitors, and protected his associates from retaliation when they assaulted, robbed, or cheated their victims.

The case became the most complex criminal case in the history of Hawaii and this judicial district, eventually involving over 2 million pages of documents, including almost 300,000 pages of accounting records from his business and personal finances, hundreds of gigabytes of digital files including data extractions from 150 digital devices including phones, computers, hard drives, thumb drives and DVDs with over 200,000 video clips and masses of text messages, and more than 200 hours of audio and video recordings.

Bermudez pleaded guilty in September 2022 to being part of Miske’s racketeering conspiracy, meth and cocaine trafficking, and armed robbery, and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Nammar opened the hearing by describing Bermudez as an important member of what prosecutors dubbed the Miske Enterprise, an “incredibly violent” individual, a “loose cannon” who Miske relied on, and who thought he was untouchable because he was protected by his association with Miske’s organization.

Nammar recited a litany of crimes attributed to Bermudez. Eighteen racketeering offenses. Three drive-by shootings. The attempted murder of the Waimanalo man, and burning of the van believed to have been used to the kidnapping and murder of Jonathan Fraser. Eight “brazen” armed robberies of drug dealers and illegal game rooms in which some victims “were tied up, pistol whipped, punched, and stomped.” And more.

“Everybody had their role,” Nammar said, “his was as a shooter.”

Given this offense history, Nammar said the government recommended a sentence of 327 months, at the high end of applicable federal guidelines. He said it would would be a fair sentence, even after a several step reduction from federal sentencing guidelines for providing “substantial assistance” while cooperating with prosecutors.

Myles Breiner, Bermudez’s attorney, emphasized that his client’s cooperation with prosecutors despite repeated threats. He termed the proposed 327 month sentence “outrageous,” and instead asked for a lesser sentence of 10 years, the mandatory minimum sentence for conviction on the drug trafficking charge.

The attorney compared Bermudez to Delia Fabro-Miske, Mike Miske’s daughter in law, who received an 84-month sentence. By comparison, giving Bermudez a 120-moth sentence would be fair, Breiner argued.

But Judge Watson was not swayed by Breiner’s comparison of Bermudez to Fabro-Miskie, and scolded Breiner for suggesting it.

“Fabro-Miske was no angel,” Watson said. “But nor was she violent, there was no allegation she engaged in a single act of violence much less the 18 Mr. Nammar identified,” referring back to the Assistant U.S. Attorney’s review of Bermudez’s long list of violent offenses.

Bermudez, on the other hand, was the most violent of all of Miske’s 18 co-defendants and associates who pleaded guilty in this and related cases.

“Others were violent,” Watson said, “but the number of different violent acts, the brazenness, it would not be incorrect to say it was unprecedented.”

Bermudez was “running amok” during a crime spree in 2016 and 2017, Watson said.

“I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say he terrorized this city and this county to a greater extent than anyone i can remember.”

Watson pointed out that 120 months sentence requested by Breiner was the minimum sentence allowed by law on the drug charge alone.

“It’s an asinine recommendation, that’s exactly what it is, and insulting, among many others things,” Watson told Breiner. “It’s outrageous, ridiculous, and any other adjective you can think of to describe something that is patently not going to happen.”

Watson also noted Bermudez was not the only Miske associate to be threatened for cooperating with prosecutors.

“Many others faced threat of retribution by Miske and members of his enterprise,” Watson said, and “others faced greater theats of retribution” but appeared to as witnesses anyway.

And although Bermudez initially cooperated and provided useful information to prosecutors about several crimes, he ultimately refused to testify against Miske during the trial, “contrary to his plea agreement and contrary to statements to the government.”

With that, Watson imposed a 30-year sentence on the drug charge, which carried a maximum possible sentence of life in prison. Additional 20 year sentences were meted out for both the racketeering conspiracy and armed robbery charges, both to run concurrently at the same time as the longer sentence.

And that was the end of the criminal case against Mike Miske and his gang. Miske was convicted last year by a jury on 13 counts, including several carrying mandatory life sentences, but died of a fentanyl overdose while held in Honolulu’s federal detention center pending sentencing. At least 18 others were convicted, most of then now serving sentencing in federal custody.

“It is the culmination of a long road,” Watson said, referring to the end of the case.

But although the criminal case before Judge Watson is concluded, there are still several open proceedings.

Hours after the hearing, Myles Breiner filed a motion to withdraw as Bermudez’s attorney. In an accompanying sworn declaration, Breiner said Bermudez wants to appeal his sentence, and that there is a “potential for a conflict of interest upon appeal, based on a potential claim for ineffective assistance of counsel.” Breiner asked the court to grant his request to withdraw an to appoint another attorney to handle the appeal to the 9th Circuit.

John Stancil, Mike Miske’s younger half-brother, also has a pending appeal of his 20-year sentence pending at the 9th Circuit. The appeal has been delayed several times at his attorney’s request.

And the government’s civil lawsuit seeking forfeiture of Miske’s personal and business assets, estimated to be worth in the neighborhood of $25 million, is currently on hold pending settlement negotiations between the government and the attorney representing the trustees of the Michael J. Miske, Jr. Revocable Living Trust.

In a joint status report on the case filed by Acting U.S. Attorney Kenneth Sorenson and attorneys representing the Miske trust, as well as two of the three financial institutions holding outstanding mortgages on Miske properties, the parties reported that there have been discussions between the government and the trust regarding the sale of some assets while the case is pending.

“Those discussions are ongoing,” the report stated. Meanwhile, a successor trustee of the Miske Trust has been appointed “and is working to obtain relevant account information from the Financial Institution Claimants.”

This successor trustee is not named.


Discover more from i L i n d

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

6 thoughts on “The “Hammah” and his attorney get hammered as the Miske Enterprise case winds down

  1. Thanks

    Judge Watson didn’t just sentence Bermudez — he sentenced the era of puffed-up comparisons and courtroom theater. Breiner might’ve asked for 10 years, but what he got was a master class in federal sentencing reality. I stand with Watson — principled, prepared, and unshaken by nonsense.

    Reply
  2. Lynn

    Thank you, Ian, for all the amazing reporting. Of all the awful things that have happened, my heart goes out most to Shelly Miguel and the rest of Jonathan Fraser’s family.

    Reply
  3. Louis

    Difficult to wrap my mind around the sheer scale of this racket; how long and far it was able to fester and metastasize. And even more remarkable how it started to unravel over something as innocuous as Christmas lights in a public park tree out in Hawaii Kai.

    Reply
  4. Pauly Llama

    I hiked the 2,200-hundred-mile Appalachian Trail through 14 states last year, from Georgia to Maine. I had my cell phone and a battery back up that I would charge between resupply towns. I was addicted to the Miske story and made sure that when I had cell coverage, that I’d get your updates. It was amazingly interesting, scary, and, educational to know that this kind of underworld still exists nowadays on Oahu, and I’m very happy for the closure on this one. Great reporting, not just the facts, but the style of how you communicated them to the reader.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Jane Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.