MS-13 gang growing extremely dangerous, FBI says

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20060106/...angerousfbisays

MS-13 gang growing extremely dangerous, FBI says
By Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
Fri Jan 6, 7:56 AM ET


In early November, the FBI and Houston police learned that six suspected members of Mara Salvatrucha, a violent Central American gang known as MS-13, were raiding a house on Liberty Street where a rival gang had stashed drugs.

MS-13 - the focus of a nationwide crackdown by FBI and federal immigration agents - has become known in recent years for home invasion robberies, drug dealing and machete attacks on its enemies. But what happened in Houston on Nov. 2, FBI and Houston police officials say, has heightened concerns that MS-13 could be far more dangerous than thought.


The MS-13



suspects swept through the house like a well-trained
assault team, using paramilitary tactics including perimeter lookouts, high-powered weaponry (an AK-47 rifle was among the weapons recovered later), and a quick, room-by-room sweep of the house that was notable for its precision and sophistication, Houston police spokesman Alvin Wright says.


When the MS-13 suspects were challenged by authorities, the result was an intense shootout that killed two suspects, identified as Juan Antonio Bautista, 29, and Jose Antonio Pino, 33. The four others were arrested and face an array of state charges, including robbery and assault.


Bob Clifford, who directs the FBI unit created last year to combat MS-13, says the battle symbolized MS-13's development from a smattering of loosely organized cells across the nation to an increasingly efficient and dangerous organization that has become a significant threat to public safety.


"Our worst suspicions about MS-13 have been c
onfi
rmed
&quo
t; by the Houston shooting and other recent gang-related incidents
, Clifford says.


From low-income neighborhoods in Los Angeles, MS-13 has spread throughout the USA, largely following the migration patterns of immigrants from El Salvador and other Central American nations. With a membership that the FBI estimates could be as high as 10,000, MS-13 is most active in Los Angeles, the Mid-Atlantic, Rhode Island and Connecticut.


Routes for trafficking


Clifford says the group also has formed commerce routes across the nation for drug-trafficking operations that often include "theft crews" who steal over-the-counter cough and cold medicines from drugstores. Such medicines, which can be abused or used to make other drugs, are then sold to help finance MS-13 units, Clifford says.



In recent years, MS-13's reputation as a particularly brutal gang was cemented by a series of incidents, several of them in Northern Virginia. In one,
a former
MS-13 m
ember wh
o had become a police informant was fatally stabbed and her head almost severed. In another,
MS-13 members used a machete to cut off several fingers of a rival gang member.


The Houston shootout, however, raised questions about whether the gang - whose original members in Los Angeles included people with paramilitary training who fled the civil war in El Salvador during the 1980s - is evolving into an organization that is in their image.


The Houston incident sparked an FBI investigation that has reached into El Salvador to try to determine whether MS-13 members are receiving formal training in weapons and military tactics before they come to the USA - often as illegal immigrants.


Raids of suspected MS-13 safe houses in Central America, Mexico and the USA by federal and international law enforcement officials resulted in more than 600 arrests and the discovery of gang "constitutions," the FBI said.


The documents, most of
them crudely
handwritten
codes of co
nduct, listed a range of punishments - from death to severe beatings - for transgressions against the gang. The s
eizures marked the first time that such organizational records had been recovered in this country.


Federal agents and local police say that recent arrests of MS-13 members have shed light on how the gang is raising money in the USA.


Stealing from drugstores


Three months ago in Madison, Wis., local police and FBI investigators arrested three suspected MS-13 members who allegedly were involved in stealing tens of thousands of dollars' worth of over-the-counter medicines from 22 Walgreens drugstores throughout the Midwest.


Madison detectives and FBI investigators later determined that the medicines were being transported to a warehouse in Louisville to be resold.

"We had not seen evidence of their presence here before (the arrests) or since," says Mike Hanson, spokesman for the Madison Pol
ice Department.
"Our unders
tanding is they
were passing through here. They knew the number of Walgreens stores and were familiar with the routes in and out of town."

In several cases, Han
son says, the suspects used a special bag that blocked the drugstores' electronic sensors from detecting items that were being stolen from the stores.

"The suspects researched Walgreens throughout the Midwest and on a routine basis averaged $45,000 to $55,000 worth of stolen merchandise per day," Hanson says.

Clifford says "it would be dangerous to look at MS-13 as just another street gang."
 
Tennessee Gang Threat: MS-13 Recruiting, Victimizing Hispanics

Tennessee Gang Threat: MS-13 Recruiting, Victimizing Hispanics

Tennessee Gang Threat: MS-13 Recruiting, Victimizing Hispanics

Knoxville (WVLT) - They call themselves members of Mara Salvatrucha, MS-13 for short, and their reputation precedes them.

A record of violence so brutal, so long, that some federal agencies consider MS-13, the most serious gang threat our country faces.

ms-13.jpg


Volunteer TV's Gordon Boyd been asking whether a major indictment in Nashville, could be signs of trouble here.

Apparently, not yet.

MS-13's roots are in El Salvador and the Dominican Republic, but federal agents say it's spread, as Hispanic immigrants have spread.

"MS swept into Nashville, like a pack of jackals, and they left a group of bloody victims in their wake," says ATF Agent Jim Cavanaugh.

Prosecutors and Federal Agents allege the body count began almost a year ago. A man shot and killed outside a bar in Madison, Tennessee.

Roughly six months later, two men shot dead in their car.

Thirteen men now stand accused of planning those murders and 7 more, their alleged gang ties, considered a criminal conspiracy.

"Their victims were mostly Latrino, they preyed on other Latrino citizens," says US Attorney Craig Morford.

"Point though, law enforcement will find a reference to 13 with a gang member, and will believe its MS 13, when in fact, its other gangs that use the number 13," explains Special Agent Mike MacLean, from the FBI Violent Crime/Criminal Enterprise Squad.

The Knoxville FBI's Gang Specialist says there's no doubt MS-13 has infiltrated Middle Tennessee, but East Tennessee may be more a victim of wannabes.

"We've had cases where they were just talking, they were Hispanic males who knew, just with the reputation of MS, no one was gonna screw with them," Special Agent MacLean says.

The threat of MS-13's, or any Hispanic gang, Special Agent Mike MacLeans says, grows as the recruiting pool grows, that is, where the jobs, and money go.

"Where we see heavy Hispanic gang activity here, we see quite a bit in Lenior City, heavy into construction right now, the potential is there," Special Agent MacLean. "We take every one of those sightings incredibly seriously."

Knoxville FBI agents meet monthly with police and sheriff's departments, to track reports of gang trouble.

TBI says it's found nothing to tie MS-13 to the murder of a Highway Patrolman in West Tennessee this past weekend.

No question, MS-13 has its own mystique and mythology.

Internet reports claim it has as many as 50,000 members. More than four times FBI estimates.
 
Decapitating MS-13 suspect snared

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headline/metro/4513007.html

MS-13 suspect snared


By MIKE GLENN
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle

A suspected member of the violent MS-13 gang evaded capture for several months after a shootout last year with police and the FBI in Houston, crossing into his native Honduras where authorities accused him of the Christmas Day decapitations of his former in-laws.

On Tuesday, Albin Adalin Zelaya-Zelaya, 26, was being held on assault and immigration charges in the Harris County Jail after he and five others were arrested early Saturday at an apartment in the 10100 block of S. Gessner.

Also taken into custody were Zelaya-Zelaya's brother, Pablo Romero, 31; Miguel Estrada, 21; Johnny Fernandez, 27; Marlin Turcios, 20; and Marcos Caldron, 24.

They were charged with evading arrest and also face federal immigration charges, police said.

Zelaya-Zelaya, also known as Flaco, had taken part in the Sept. 22 attempted holdup of illegal immigrants at a motel in the 8900 block of the Gulf Freeway, investigators said.

"They never actually got to rob them," said Shauna Dunlap, with the Houston FBI office. "We prevented the robberies before they could take place."

One FBI agent was wounded in the shootout.

Although five people were taken into custody after the botched holdup, Zelaya-Zelaya managed to escape.

"He knew that we were looking for him. He went back to Honduras," said Capt. Mike Graham, with the Houston Police Department's gang unit.

Zelaya-Zelaya surfaced on Christmas Day in Honduras, where authorities there accused him and Romero in the double slaying of Eleazar and Suyapa Vasquez.

Investigators said they thought it would only be a matter of time before Zelaya-Zelaya eventually made his way back to Houston after the killings. "But we just didn't know when," Graham said.

Zelaya-Zelaya was sent back to Honduras in late January 2006 but managed to make at least two other successful crossings of the border before his arrest Saturday.

"We did deport him when we identified that he was an illegal alien," said Luisa Deason, with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Police say Zelaya-Zelaya's group may be responsible for a string of local crimes, including at least four kidnapping cases that targeted illegal immigrants or their smugglers.

The victims are often hesitant to come forward, officials said.

"These types of criminals prey on individuals that they know will not go to law enforcement," Dunlap said. "They are kidnapping and robbing illegal aliens, holding them for ransom."

FBI officials declined to comment Tuesday on specifics of the kidnapping cases, citing the ongoing investigation.

According to Interpol, Zelaya-Zelaya also is wanted for questioning about a December 2004 attack on a bus in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, that killed 37 people, authorities said.

But "he's not officially been named a suspect," Dunlap said.

It wasn't known Tuesday whether government officials in Honduras will seek an immediate extradition of Zelaya-Zelaya or his brother. Officials with the Honduran Consulate in Houston could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

"We are still working with (the Honduran authorities) to determine the protocol on what exactly will happen with these individuals," Dunlap said.

Though MS-13 operates in several major cities throughout the country, HPD officials said they are loosely organized and transient.

"They may be here for a month or two then they may scoot off to another city here in the U.S., or they may go back home," Graham said.

Zelaya-Zelaya is being held without bail.
 
Re: Decapitating MS-13 suspect snared

10879996_240X180.jpg

Albin Adalin Zalaya-Zelaya

Suspected MS-13 Gang Leader Arrested

A suspected MS-13 gang leader wanted in connection with multiple violent crimes was arrested in Houston, KPRC Local 2 reported Tuesday.

Zalaya-Zelaya was wanted in Texas in connection with a burglary of a habitation with intent to commit aggravated assault. He was also wanted by federal officials for re-entering the United States illegally. He was deported in January 2006.
 
Ultra-violent MS-13 gangs now present in 3,500 U.S. cities

Police targeting urban marauders

Ultra-violent MS-13 gangs now present in 3,500 U.S. cities

by Jerome R. Corsi

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador – The ultra-violent street gang MS-13, causing mayhem in cities and suburbs across the United States, is the focus of an international conference here co-sponsored by the FBI and the national police force in this Central American nation that served as the birthplace of the urban marauders.

In the opening session of the Gang Enforcement Conference (Tercera Conferencia Antipandillas), El Salvador President Antonio Saca said the problem is one that should concern many nations.

"Gangs like MS-13 have evolved into coordinated and well-financed criminal organizations," he said, making them an international problem.

"The immigration that we have experienced in the region, into Mexico and the
United States is a theme we have to understand," Saca explained. "The same activity of the criminal gangs we experience here in this region is now being experienced in the United States. The territorial expansion of these criminal organizations is the principle menace we are facing from gangs like MS-13."

The conference, which started yesterday, is sponsored by the Policia National Civil (National Civil Police) in El Salvador and co-sponsored by the FBI's MS-13 Task Force, headed by Brian Truchon in Washington.

A select group of U.S. and international law enforcement officers, including representatives from Mexico and Latin America, is working on how to respond to the El Salvador-grown MS-13 gang (Mara Salvatrucha Gang), the tattooed drug-dealing criminals haunting the nightmares of FBI agents across the U.S.

WND reported as early as 1995 the gang reportedly was meeting with representatives of al-Qaida and smuggling operatives into the United States from Mexico.

Attorney James Tr
usty recently told a court in a case reported by the Washington Post that three leaders participated in or planned four murders over a span of only two years. Trusty told the court MS-13 gang members follow the "rape, kill and control" philosophy," using guns, knives and machetes.

Robert Loosle, FBI special agent in charge in Los Angeles, told WND that a key focus of the conference is to make sure "everybody is on the same page" both within the U.S. and internationally in dealing with the growing problem of Hispanic gangs in the United States.

"With Hispanic gangs, we are facing an international law enforcement challenge," Loosle explained. "Gangs like MS-13 may cause a problem locally in the U.S. communities where the gang operates. But the gang has ties and connections back to El Salvador, as well as to other Latin American countries."

Frank Flores of the Los Angeles Police Department told the convention that MS-13 today is recruiting members not just from El Salvador, but fro
m the Hispanic community at large and even from Los Angeles' African-American community.


Flores told the group that the Mexican Mafia controls the Hispanic groups in California from within the state prisons.

"Gangs like MS-13 or the 18th Street Gang have a history that goes back into the 1980s," Flores explained. "The Mexican Mafia is organized as a crime hierarchy, along the model of the Sicilian Mafia. The big money business for the Hispanic gangs still is drugs. All through Los Angeles any gang or gang member who wants to deal drugs is going to have to pay 'rent' to EME [the Mexican Mafia], or else they are out of business and most likely dead."

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa is planning to visit President Saca during his nine-day swing through El Salvador and Mexico planned in early May, and Loosle told WND that he was planning to remain in El Salvador after the conference in order to prepare for Villaraigosa’s meeting with Saca.

"Los Angeles and San Sal
vador are sister cities," Loosle said. "We want to make sure our FBI gang task force and Mexico's Policia National Civil exchange information and work together on a continuing basis."

"We also want to set up an officer exchange program," Loosle continued, "where LAPD officers can be assigned to work in El Salvador to gain experience and at the same time we can invite officers from El Salvador's national police to work with us in LA."

An important theme in the first day of the conference was that "if it's happening in LA, it's probably also happening here in El Salvador."

"In the world of Hispanic gangs," Jose Chavez of the LAPD told the conference, "all roads lead to LA. We are trying to exchange information with law enforcement throughout the U.S. and throughout Latin America. LA is becoming a 'fusion center' for information on Hispanic gangs."

El Salvadoran law enforcement authorities echoed that theme.

Jerome Corsi is in El Salvador attending the Third Gang E
nforcement Conference for WND, at the invitation of the FBI’s MS-13 Task Force.

http://www.knowgangs.com/news/apr07/0425.php

:US: :guns: :mex:
 
The best bet would be to stop immigration!

MS-13's Primary Goal Is Killing, Prosecutor Says at Start of Trial


Members of the MS-13 street gang live by the motto "We kill, we rape, we control" and follow the orders of leaders known as "The Word," a prosecutor said yesterday as the federal racketeering trial of two alleged gang members began.

MS-13, a violent Latino gang also known as Mara Salvatrucha, has rules that include a standing edict to kill rival gang members, Assistant U.S. Attorney Sandra Wilkinson said in her opening statement in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt.

"The objective of the gang is to kill people," Wilkinson said.

Prosecutors said in court papers that the gang has 10,000 members in 10 states and the District,
as well as in El Salvador, Honduras and Mexico. Wilkinson said MS-13 has many cliques, which she compared to business franchises.

Each clique has a leader, "The Word," and each leader has a top lieutenant, "The Second," Wilkinson said.

The defendants, Oscar Ramos "Casper" Velasquez, 21, of Baltimore and Edgar Alberto "Pony" Ayala, 28, of Suitland, are the first two of 19 scheduled to go on trial. They are being tried under the federal RICO law, which was enacted in the early 1970s to target Mafia groups.

MS-13 gang members have conspired to commit murder, rape, kidnapping and robbery and to obstruct justice by attacking or intimidating witnesses, federal prosecutors allege in their original indictment and two superseding indictments.

The original indictment charges the gang with six homicides and four attempted murders between April 2003 and June 2005. Eight of the attacks were in Prince George's County, the other two in Montgomery County.

A superseding murder indictment handed up last week ci
tes an additional case, from January 2005, when, it alleges, two MS-13 gang members fired into a group of youths sitting outside an apartment building in Fairfax County. One man was killed and two juveniles were wounded in that assault.

Neither Velasquez nor Ayala is charged with murder. Neither faces the possibility of the death penalty if convicted, although nine defendants do.

In their opening arguments, defense attorneys for Velasquez and Ayala said prosecutors were trying to convict their clients for the actions of others.

Gary A. Ticknor, Ayala's defense attorney, told jurors that President Harry S. Truman was a member of the Ku Klux Klan for a time. "You can be a member of a horrible organization and be a decent human being," he said.

Richard C. Bittner, Velasquez's attorney, said the government's case against his client amounts to "guilt by association."

According to prosecutors, Velasquez and others accused of being MS-13 members sexually assaulted two teenage girls at a "skipping p
arty" -- in which students ditch school -- May 12, 2003. In her opening statement, Wilkinson said Velasquez wielded a gun during the assault, adding that the victims were 15 and 16 at the time.

Velasquez is also accused of helping assault rival gang members outside a Langley Park nightclub in September 2004 and of attending an MS-13 meeting at which dues were paid.

Ayala is accused of driving with fellow gang members to the Fairfax County apartment building where a man was fatally shot. Ayala is also accused of giving false testimony to a Prince George's grand jury that investigated the beating death of Ashley Antonio Urias in May 2004. Wilkinson said in her initial statement that Ayala was covering up for MS-13 members.
It is sad that we let parasites like this move into our society! Oh well it could be worse it could be a whack load of niggers!
 
MS-13 members take stand in teen murder trial
03:11 PM CDT on Wednesday, June 20, 2007

There was extra security at a downtown courtroom as members of the MS-13 gang testified Wednesday in the trial of a teenager charged in a fatal stabbing.

Ashley Benton, 17, is accused of killing Gabriel Granillo in a Montrose area park last June.

Her attorneys claim it was self defense because, they say, Granillo was swinging a baseball bat at her.

Prosecutors are trying to prove that it’s an unwritten rule in the MS-13 gang, that they do not fight women. (They may not fight them, but they damn sure rape and kill them.)

http://www.khou.com/news/local/stories/khou070620_jj_chewparkcourt.20b3956f.html
 
Alleged Gang Member to be Arraigned in Suffolk Shooting

Alleged Gang Member to be Arraigned in Suffolk Shooting

Wednesday arraignment for reputed Salvadoran gang member

Alleged shooter Marvin Garcia, 20, of Huntington Station, is scheduled for arraignment in Suffolk County Court tomorrow on a grand jury indictment. The charges stem from a triple shooting that occurred in Huntington Station last month.

com.northender.objects.Story_Content_0_00127.jpg


He is charged with shooting three males as they sat on the stoop [poachmonkeys] of a residence on Columbia Street in Huntington Station at approximately 11:10 PM on Sunday, June 24th.

The victims were Christopher Springfield, 21, of Wyandanch; Ariel Perez, 17, who lives at the Columbia Street address; and an unnamed juvenile. None of their injuries were life threatening, police said.

Garcia will go before Judge James F.X. Doyle in Riverhead. He is charged with three counts of second-degree assault and second-degree criminal possession of a weapon.

Initially, Suffolk County police reported that Garcia was also to be charged with resisting arrest during his June 27th apprehension; and with two counts of Rape 1st Degree and Sodomy 1st Degree. The sexual assault charges reportedly stemmed from an attack on a 15-year-old girl in October of 2006.

Police have also identified Garcia as a member of the international gang, MS-13.

Formed in the 1980’s, MS-13 includes as many as 10,000 members in over 30 states, according to the FBI and Department of Justice. As many as 1,500 are thought to be in the Northern Virginia/Washington, DC area alone. The gang has an estimated 40,000 members in Central America.

The FBI says that most members are from El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. MS-13 first became a presence in the US in Los Angeles, but has spread to suburban and even rural areas.

In 2005, the FBI established the MS-13 National Task Force in an effort to check the group before it attains the degree of power wielded by gangs such as “18th Street”��”��, believed by the National Alliance of Gang Investigators Associations to have as many as 30,000 members in California alone.

Already, MS-13’s influence is far reaching. Earlier this month, a federal grand jury returned indictments on multiple charges against three defendants identified as members of the gang. Two of the defendants are in prison in El Salvador, from which they are believed to have arranged at least two murders in the US. They are part of a larger MS-13 “clique”��”�� blamed for seven murders in Maryland and one in Virginia from 2001 to 2007.

The indictment against the three also notes “assault on juvenile females”��”��. According to the FBI, “Mata, Viola, Controla”��”�� – “Kill, Rape, Control”��”�� – is one of the gang’s mottos.

Among the most famous crimes supposed to have been committed by gang members was a massacre in Honduras on December 23rd, 2004. Armed individuals boarded a public bus and killed 28 people execution-style, including six children. A note was left at the scene purporting to be from MS-13 and taking credit for the murders, saying they were in retaliation against anti-gang laws implemented by the Honduran government.

Closer to home, a federal jury on Long Island in April of last year returned a guilty verdict against Leonel “Little Chino”��”�� Mejia of Uniondale. Mejia received a mandatory life imprisonment sentence for the 2003 murder of 19-year-old fellow MS-13 member Edgardo Sanchez. Sanchez was murdered in North Massapequa, allegedly after Mejia and other members of the gang discovered that he had assisted police in the arrests of six gang members on murder and other charges.

In March of 2005, 30 suspected gang members were arrested around Long Island as part of “Operation Community Shield”��”��, a nationwide crackdown that resulted in 103 arrests.

In March of 1998, eight suspected gang members were arrested in Port Washington.
 
MS-13 Gang Member Sentenced To 19 Years
Geovanni Pena Sentenced To 235 Months

POSTED: 8:36 pm CST November 20, 2007


NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- A member of a nationwide street gang was sentenced Tuesday to more than 19 years in federal prison for charges related to shooting a rival gang member.

Geovanni Pena, also known as Rata, was sentenced to 235 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Todd J. Campbell.

He was the first of 14 members of the gang known as MS-13 indicted in Tennessee's Middle District to be sentenced.

At a court hearing in September, Pena admitted that on Sept. 4, 2006, he shot a man several times in the back at J. Percy Priest Lake because he believed the man was a member of the rival street gang 18th Street. The victim survived.

Pena also admitted to firing a handgun into a crowd of people outside a Nashville nightclub a day earlier, wounding two men.

"Cowards deserve 19 years in the cooler," said Jim Cavanaugh, :D special agent in charge of the Nashville field division, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The name of the slain gang member remains sealed as an investigation continues, investigators said.

The 14 were indicted in January on charges of participating in a racketeering enterprise and related charges including murder, attempted murder, assault and obstruction of justice.

"A lot of citizens in the Latino community stepped forward to help us," Cavanaugh said. "It's too bad a small part of their community gets so much attention."

Cases against the other 13 are pending.

MS-13 also is known as La Mara Salvatrucha, a Salvadoran gang that started in Los Angeles, investigators said. It is one of the largest and most violent street gangs in the country and its activities have also been spread to Central America by deported members.

"Gang violence fuels crime," Cavanaugh said. "Revenge begets revenge and you end up with a circle of violence. This (conviction) helps us dam the violence. It's one step."

http://www.wsmv.com/news/14655185/detail.html
 
Double Beanicide at Spic Eatery

Waitress Talks About Restaurant Murders

GREENSBORO, N.C. (WGHP) – After making one arrest, police continue their search for two men wanted in the shooting deaths of two brothers inside a High Point Rd. restaurant Saturday, Dec. 8.

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Alejandro Enrique Umana, 23, was arrested in Charlotte on Wednesday. He is charged with two counts of murder. Police believe he is a member of the MS-13 gang.

Manuel and Ruben Salinas were regular customers at Las Jarochitas restaurant. The owners said the brothers came in to eat there at least three times a week.

Witnesses said the pair was trying to stop any trouble before it happened.

"Everything was okay until these people show up," said Jasmine Dinwiddle, a waitress, referring to Umana and his two friends. She said she left about 90 minutes before the shooting.

Restaurant employees told FOX8 News they refused to serve Umana and his friends drinks and told them they couldn't smoke, hoping the three would leave.

Employees said the three were at the door, ready to leave, when the Salinas brothers told the waitresses they should call police. Witnesses said Ruben Salinas reached for a phone and acted like he was calling police when Umana turned around, pulled out a weapon and shot and killed the brothers.

Police do not know whether the two men with Umana are affiliated with MS-13.

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Justice Department Releases MS-13 Threat Assessment

Justice Department Releases MS-13 Threat Assessment

They've severed the fingers of their rivals with machetes...brutally murdered suspected informants, including a 17-year-old pregnant federal witness...attacked and threatened law enforcement officers...committed a string of rapes, assaults, break-ins, auto thefts, extortions, and frauds across the US...gotten involved in everything from drug and firearms trafficking to prostitution and money laundering...and are sowing violence and discord not just here in the US but around the world.

MS-13 members perpetrate violence—from assaults to homicides, using firearms, machetes, or blunt objects—to intimidate rival gangs, law enforcement, and the general public. They often target middle and high school students for recruitment. And they form tenuous alliances...and sometimes vicious rivalries...with other criminal groups, depending on their needs at the time.

Who are they? Members of Mara Salvatrucha, better known as MS-13, who are mostly Salvadoran nationals or first generation Salvadoran-Americans, but also Hondurans, Guatemalans, Mexicans, and other Central and South American immigrants. And according to our recent national threat assessment of this growing, mobile street gang, they could be operating in your community...now or in the near future.

Based on information from our own investigations, from our state and local law enforcement partners, and from community organizations, we´ve concluded that while the threat posed by MS-13 to the US as a whole is at the "medium" level, membership in parts of the country is so concentrated that we've labeled the threat level there "high."

Here are some other highlights from the FBI's MS-13 threat assessment:

MS-13 operates in at least 42 states and the District of Columbia and has about 6,000-10,000 members nationwide. Currently, the threat is highest in the western and northeastern parts of the country, which coincides with elevated Salvadoran immigrant populations in those areas. In the southeast and central regions, the current threat is moderate to low, but recently, we've seen an influx of MS-13 members into the southeast, causing an increase in violent crimes there.

MS-13 members engage in a wide range of criminal activity, including drug distribution, murder, rape, prostitution, robbery, home invasions, immigration offenses, kidnapping, carjackings/auto thefts, and vandalism. Most of these crimes, you'll notice, have one thing in common—they are exceedingly violent. And while most of the violence is directed toward other MS-13 members or rival street gangs, innocent citizens often get caught in the crossfire.

MS-13 is expanding its membership at a "moderate" rate through recruitment and migration. Some MS-13 members move to get jobs or to be near family members—currently, the southeast and the northeast are seeing the largest increases in membership. MS-13 often recruits new members by glorifying the gang lifestyle (often on the Internet, complete with pictures and videos) and by absorbing smaller gangs.

Speaking of employment, MS-13 members typically work for legitimate businesses by presenting false documentation. They primarily pick employers that don't scrutinize employment documents, especially in the construction, restaurant, delivery service, and landscaping industries.

Right now, MS-13 has no official national leadership structure. MS-13 originated in Los Angeles, but when members migrated eastward, they began forming cliques that for the most part operated independently. These cliques, though, often maintain regular contact with members in other regions to coordinate recruitment/criminal activities and to prevent conflicts. We do believe that Los Angeles gang members have an elevated status among their MS-13 counterparts across the country, a system of respect that could potentially evolve into a more organized national leadership structure.

The FBI has been placing more and more resources on the front lines of the MS-13 problem. There are an estimated 10,000 MS-13 gang members in the US and five times as many in the countries that attended the conference.

In 2004, the FBI created the MS-13 National Gang Task Force. In 2005, the FBI helped create a National Gang Information Center and outlined a National Gang Strategy for Congress. Last year, the MS-13 task force coordinated a series of arrests and crackdowns in the US and Central America that involved more than 6,000 police officers in five countries. Seventy-three suspects were arrested in the US; in all, more than 650 were taken into custody.
 
149 arrested in S.E. Texas crackdown on gangs
June 9, 2008, 12:58AM

A multiagency crackdown on Southeast Texas street gangs and other criminal activity led to the arrest of nearly 150 people last week, including 67 suspected gang members or associates, authorities said Sunday.

More than a dozen of those were allegedly members of the notorious Mara Salvatrucha organization, officials said.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents teamed with law enforcement agencies in Houston and seven other Texas cities to target gang members wanted on state charges or immigration violations, said Robert P. Rutt, special agent in charge of the ICE Office of Investigations in Houston.

The suspected gang members are associated with 22 organizations, au
thorities said, including the Mara Salvatrucha, aka MS-13, a violent street gang with roots in Central America and strong ties in Houston.

According to authorities, of the 67 arrested:

"�Ãâ┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�šÃ”š¢Forty-six were arrested on suspicion of immigration violations.
"�Ãâ┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�šÃ”š¢Twenty were picked up on outstanding state arrest warrants and turned over to local authorities.
"�Ãâ┚¬Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�šÃ”š¢One was arrested on a federal drug arrest warrant.
Rutt said Sunday that 21 of the 67 arrested were U.S. citizens. ICE officials declined to release the names of those arrested in the six-day operation, which ended Saturday, citing "pending charges."

The operation is part of an ICE program called "Operation Community Shield," which involves partnerships with other federal, state and local agencies to target gang members. More than a dozen such agencies participated in the operation, including the sheriffs' offices for Harris and Montgomery counties and the Houston Police Department's Gang Task Force.


nRutt said the enforcement operation allowed ICE to use immigration status as a "force multiplier" for local agencies struggling with gangs.

In addition to those with suspected gang ties, the operation led to the arrests of 82 people for criminal or immigration violations not related to gang activity, authorities said, bringing the total number of people arrested to 149. ICE officials said those detained on immigration violations were from Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Belize, Colombia and Pakistan.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/5826219.html
 
Agents: Foreign gang member detained

United States Border Patrol agents who encountered a group of illegal entrants in the desert west of Casa Grande, found a member of a violent Central America gang and took him into custody.

The 27-year-old El Salvadoran man is a member of the notorious Mara Salvatrucha, also known as MS-13, said Senior Border Patrol Agent Dove Haber, a Border Patrol spokeswoman here.

The man, who was not named, was being held in federal custody for removal proceedings and possible prosecution.

He was convicted earlier in Virginia for identity theft and hit-and-run driving, Haber said.

She said federal records showed he also had been ordered deported from the United States at least once before.

His past was uncovered after he was picked up with other members of the group and agents ran his name through a computerized fingerprint database, the Border Patrol said.
 
That's what happens when we allow these third world animals into our country, they immeadiately seek to turn it into the third world.
 
:mad::mad:James Elliot your right. MS13 is, now probably the most dangerous gang in America. They use scare tactics on youngersters to to get them in the gang. Then force them to do violence, on the public , to prove thier alliegeance. From theft to murder...
 
MS-13 member gets 38 years for killing wrong man

By JANON FISHER
Last Updated: 3:15 PM, January 22, 2010
Posted: 1:31 PM, January 22, 2010

A Brooklyn federal judge sentenced a ruthless, unrepentant MS-13 street gang member to 38 years in prison for murdering the wrong man in a 2006 Christmas Eve revenge killing in Flushing, Queens.

:mex: Hector Portillo, 20, pleaded guilty last September to standing over the body of :suspect: Pashad Gray and repeatedly firing bullet after bullet into the body of the man he mistakenly thought was a Bloods gang member who had previously stabbed him.

The diminutive street hood showed no remorse as he shifted restlessly and looked around the courtroom when Grays sister asked for an apology.

“Can me and my family get an apology?” Rynadia Whittingtondo asked Judge Sterling Johnson.

“I gave him the opportunity, but he declined to speak,” said Johnson when issuing his sentence. “It would be good for his soul to do so. Whether it’s here in open court or locked behind bars, he has 38 years to [apologize].”

Portillo, who has been part of the Central American-based gang since he was 11 years old, had also pleaded guilty to repeatedly stabbing another man that he had thought was badmouthing MS-13.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/..._killing_8y6yzsChrLML3sr3G6SiIL#ixzz0dNKEL0MP
 
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/22742905/detail.html

'ATL's Most Violent Gang Decimated' In Bust
Posted: 2:52 pm EST March 4,2010
Updated: 5:31 pm EST March 4,2010

ATLANTA -- Authorities have unsealed a federal indictment charging 26 alleged members of a violent transnational street gang with racketeering and other crimes in the metro Atlanta area.

Acting U.S. Attorney Sally Yates said at a news conference Thursday that the men were all associated with the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gang, which has about 10,000 members in North America.

Law enforcement officials told Channel 2 Action News Reporter Richard Elliot that MS-13 was the most violent gang in Atlanta.

The indictment said the gang members participated in racketeering activity, including seven murders, 14 attempted murders, kidnapping and robbery in metro Atlanta.

Law enforcement officials told Elliot that the indictment "decimated the MS-13 in the Atlanta area"
 
http://www.vdare.com/misc/100304_morgan.htm

Come Back, Stonewall Jackson! Hispanic Gangs Invade Shenandoah Valley


By A.W. Morgan

[FONT="Arial" [Also by A.W. Morgan: That Mount Vernon Statement: Beltway Right Ignores Immigration (Again). But They Still Want Your Money]

The [B]Shenandoah Valley [/B]is justly celebrated in American history as the place where [B]Stonewall Jackson [/B]made his name driving back [B]Northern invaders during the Civil War[/B]—in battles like Cross Keys and Port Republic.

But now, thanks to federal immigration policy, it has serious Hispanic gang problems, dating from the early 2000s.

About a year ago, a student at James Madison University was leaving the 7-Eleven on South Main Street in Harrisonburg, Va., to return to his apartment. It was 2 a.m., hardly an unusual time for a kid in the college town to walk the streets near campus.

Yet walking about the city that late is just as unsafe as it common. Three members of the Mexican SUR 13 gang attacked him, the city’s daily newspaper reported, and beat him unconscious.

They took $1 and a cell phone.[/SIZE]After the crime, a friend of the victim texted the cell phone, the newspaper reported, only to receive a scatological, threatening text in return—the printable part said [B]“South Side Sureneos run [/B[B]]these 540 streets”. [/B][Harrisonburg: gang-member’s sentence twice that of sentencing guideline recommendations, January 26, 2010]

[B]540 is the area code for the Shenandoah Valley[/B]. Sureneos, (properly spelled Sureños) stands for [B]SUR 13[/B], one of the murderous gangs [B]federal immigration authorities have permitted to spread nationwide [/B]because they are too terrified of organized Hispanics to close the borders.

Two of the feral culprits were convicted and landed in prison. But their cyberphonic claim isn’t far from the truth. [B]Harrisonburg[/B] is turning into a scaled-down [B]rural version of Los Angeles[/B]. Menacing young Hispanics run the streets and join gangs; racial gang fights with blacks are increasing. The cops can’t lock them up fast enough.

How fast is that? A judge sentenced the SUR-13 tough guys who battered the JMU student on Jan. 25, the local newspaper reported. The same day, he sentenced a member of the Crips, the African American gang. Last October, a judge sentenced a member of the rival African American Bloods gang unit out of Newport News, Va., in a drug shooting.

Harrisonburg had its first gang-related murder back in 2008. A young man connected to another unit of the Bloods was shot to death at a party near JMU’s campus. A criminal connected to that crime was involved in a gang attack in the county jail, the newspaper reported. He copped a plea and was released.

Across the Valley generally, the murder of Brenda Paz in 2003 was law enforcement’s first wake-up call. Paz was the MS-13 member found slashed to death in rural Meem’s Bottom near Woodstock, in Shenandoah County. So violent was the attack, The New York Times reported, the killers nearly [B]severed her head[/B]. They stabbed her 16 times. She had agreed to testify against her gang friends.

As The Times explained it,
“The killing shook Shenandoah in ways that can be hard for urbanites to comprehend. For weeks following the discovery of [Brenda Paz], her murder was the talk of the towns along Route 11 in Virginia — from the dairy cooperative in Strasburg, to the C.E. Thompson & Son hardware store in Edinburg, to the old-fashioned lunch counter at the Walton & Smoot pharmacy in Woodstock, across Main Street from the sheriff's office.

This sort of thing simply did not happen in a place where many families trace their ancestries in the region to before the Civil War, where people still take the time to stop in on their neighbors, where few people say they feel the need to lock their front doors.

This was not Washington, 80 miles and a world away to the east. Folks here tended to worry more about copperheads and rattlesnakes than about knife-wielding murderers.” [Hillbangers, By Matthew Brzezinski, August 15, 2004]
But “knife-wielding murderers” who belong to gangs are indeed what folks in the Shenandoah Valley have to worry about now.

In 2005, law enforcement officials identified 100 gang members in Harrisonburg. Five years later, that number has jumped to 850 members and associates.

Among the gangs: SUR 13, the major Hispanic gang in Harrisonburg; MS 13; the Latin Kings.

A survey of area news reports shows that Hispanics are committing more than their fair share of the mayhem. Obvious conclusion: if they weren’t here, illegal or not, SUR-13 and MS-13 wouldn’t be here either.

Illegal immigration is such that local law enforcement is treading water to keep up with the workload. Harrisonburg and its surrounding county, Rockingham, have detailed three police officers and a sheriff's deputy to work full time on a gang task force.

Aside from the crimes listed above, authorities filed at least 225 gang charges in 2009, the local newspaper reported, including malicious wounding, robbery, arson, larceny, credit card fraud, and, of course, gun possession as a felon.

In November, a member of the Gangster Disciples was nailed on 46 charges. In October, a grand jury handed down an indictment with 71 counts against eight members of SUR-13 and one member of the Crips.

One of the first signs of gang activity is graffiti, or “taggings”, which marks a gang’s territory or presence. In June, the newspaper reported that police logged a major increase in taggings after gangs hit seven stores in Harrisonburg’s main shopping strip in a nice section of the city.

In 2007, gang graffiti and associated activity on the other side of town virtually ruined business in a small shopping center after an anchor store moved out. Gangs left their graffiti; prostitutes and public drinkers loitered in the parking lot. It became, the newspaper reported, “a gang-ridden hole” that terrified shoppers. Unsurprisingly, a night club catering to the city’s Hispanics had moved into the shopping center.

In 2006, city police nailed one MS-13 member because he was involved in a fender-bender, the newspaper reported. His gang tattoos tipped off police. In other words, gang members are brazen and don’t much try to hide who they are or what they are doing.

A side effect of the rise of Hispanic gangs has been something of a backlash among blacks. Gangs compete for territory. In at least one case, Hispanics have [B]pushed blacks off their turf[/B].

An open air drug market in Harrisonburg near an elementary school, which blacks once controlled, is now under Hispanic management. Or should we call that “Latino?” [VDARE.COM note: Some activists like Latino better than Hispanic, because "Hispanic" suggests Spain, which is "historically white." See Hispanics (Sorry, Latinos) Discover Racial Identity. What About Whites?, By Sam Francis, September 8, 2003]

The city’s crime problem took a major turn for the worse with illegal Hispanic — oops, ‘Latino’ — immigration, and black victims of Hispanic violence sometimes strike back to send a message.

Gangs are fighting elsewhere in the Valley as well. About 70 miles north Interstate-81 from Harrisonburg and closer to D.C., Winchester has much the same problem as Harrisonburg. A member of the Bloods landed a 5-year prison sentence in Winchester for targeting a home associated with a SUR 13 member.

In 2007, a local television station reported that Winchester was home to 500 gangbangers who had residents on “high alert”. The Bloods were largest gang with about 130 members, but the second largest was Sur-13 with 50-60 members. MS-13 boasted 30-40 members.

If the rate of increase in Harrisonburg holds true for Winchester, then the number of gang members there is also close to 850. So Harrisonburg and Winchester are now home to nearly 2,000 gang members. The number [B]approaches the size of some small towns in the Valley[/B]—the population of Woodstock, the town where Brenda Paz was found sliced to pieces, is just 4,000.

In its story about gangs in the Valley after the murder of Brenda Paz, The Washington Post explained the situation succinctly:
“Law enforcement officials in the Shenandoah Valley say they believe sprawl from the inner suburbs is the main reason for an appearance in the last year or two of violent and largely Latino street gangs.

But there are other likely reasons, including a well-established community of Latino immigrants in which to blend, including thousands of Mexicans and Salvadorans drawn here for jobs in the poultry, plastics and construction industries.”[Gangs Find Bucolic New Turf in Va., By Michelle Boorstein, Washington Post, May 30, 2004]

The New York Times agreed:
“As far as law enforcement can tell, MS-13 gang members arrived on the scene in Shenandoah [County] early last year. For them, the Hispanic communities springing up around food-processing facilities across the country present an [B]opportunity to expand their business interests [/B]— in particular, dealing methamphetamine — and to attract new members. (For now, the rise of rural gangs does not include African-American gangs, which remain based in large and midsize urban areas.)”

In other words, industries that draw large numbers of Hispanics, many of them illegal aliens, also draw gangs who exploit them and recruit new members, and as well move into an area that, for all intents and purposes, is open territory.

For example, [B]Cargill Meat Solutions in Dayton, Va[/B]., just outside Harrisonburg, was the target of a federal immigration raid in 2008. ICE officials nailed a former employee who was part of a nationwide ring manufacturing and selling phony identification using the Ohio Department of Motor Vehicles. [Affidavit: Cargill Knowingly Hired Illegally Documented Workers, WHSV.com, PM Apr 22, 2009]

Nearly three dozen illegals working at the facility reportedly obtained fake identification through the ring. And authorities believed nearly 375 employees, 25 percent of the plant’s workforce of 1,459, were illegal aliens. [Federal Identity Fraud Trial in Harrisonburg, WHSV.com, April 20, 2009]
Illegal aliens in particular and immigration in general is a major issue — and expense — for taxpayers. Harrisonburg’s newspaper reported in October that 13 percent of residents in 2008 were foreign born, and 78 percent of those were not citizens. And 81 percent of surrounding Rockingham County’s 3,659 foreign-born residents were not citizens.

Naturally, their children must be educated, so city and county schools are spending millions on English-As-A-Second-Language programs. In May, the local newspaper reported that 1,751 of the city’s 4,232 students, about 41 percent, require ESL at a cost of more than $1,400 a head.

At $2.45 million for ESL in the city alone, taxpayers are groaning under the weight of immigrants without counting the crime. At least[B] 75 percent of ESL spending targets Hispanics.[/B]

Needless to say, officials told the newspaper, “[B]we embrace the diversity[/B]”. Yeah, right. Whether the Valley’s white and black families whose ancestors have lived there since the late 18th century embrace all this diversity, we are not given to know. We do know they have not been asked.

Gangs aside, immigrants caused myriad other problems. Prosecutors frequently jail Hispanic males who beat their wives and molest children. Because many of the victims are illegal aliens, prosecuting the offender becomes problematic because the victims fear deportation.

That poses a real problem for prosecutors. No human being deserves to be raped or otherwise molested, regardless of immigration status. But if a victim is an illegal alien, it affords a measure of protection for the rapist or molester.

And as with illegals in other cities, immigrants in the Shenandoah Valley drink, drive and kill, and they are frequently involved in shootings and other violence.

In July, 2008, the newspaper reported, sheriff’s deputies arrested 600 foreigners, a third of them illegals. And in just seven months prior to March 2008, local authorities turned 72 illegal alien criminals over to federal authorities via the 287g program that coordinates federal and state efforts to collar and deport illegal alien criminals.


In September 2007, the newspaper reported that just several weeks of cooperation between the county sheriff’s department and ICE netted 38 illegal aliens sitting in jail. At the time, the county sheriff said monitoring illegal aliens could be a full-time job for more than one person. In short, illegal alien crime is such that local law enforcement is treading water to keep up with the workload.

The newspaper doesn’t appear to have published numbers for 2009. But one needn’t be a pessimist to know things haven’t much improved. Nothing, after all, has changed with border enforcement.

In early February, Immigration and Customs Enforcements picked up a dozen of Harrisonburg and Rockingham’s “criminal aliens” in a wide-ranging raid of employers here and in Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C.

Presumably, the authorities will deport them. And local law enforcement officials want the illegals kept out once they are deported. But like a successful second marriage, this expectation may be the triumph of hope over experience.

Where is [B]Stonewall Jackson [/B]when we need him? [COLOR="black[COLOR="Red"]"](SIR, HE IS NO LONGER WELCOME AND WOULD BE JAILED FASTER THAN MS 13 GANG MEMBERS.) [/COLOR][/COLOR]

A.W. Morgan [Email him] is fully recovered from prolonged contact with the Beltway Right. He now lives in America.
[/SIZE][/SIZE][/FONT]
 
“The killing shook Shenandoah in ways that can be hard for urbanites to comprehend. For weeks following the discovery of [Brenda Paz], her murder was the talk of the towns along Route 11 in Virginia — from the dairy cooperative in Strasburg, to the C.E. Thompson & Son hardware store in Edinburg, to the old-fashioned lunch counter at the Walton & Smoot pharmacy in Woodstock, across Main Street from the sheriff's office.

This sort of thing simply did not happen in a place where many families trace their ancestries in the region to before the Civil War, where people still take the time to stop in on their neighbors, where few people say they feel the need to lock their front doors.

Obviously, a very White, racist community that doesn't know how to embrace diversity and celebrate the cultural contributions of the latrino community. Only in White communities are people able to live without locking a door.
 
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