MEXICAN MAFIA: 13 charged in Mexican Mafia collection racket in L.A. County jails | MEXICAN MAFIA STREET GANG THREAD

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13 charged in Mexican Mafia collection racket in L.A. County jails​

Men's Central Jail

A tier of Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles is shown. Authorities this week charged 13 people with collecting money from drug sales and extorted commissary goods inside Los Angeles County jails.

(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

By Matthew OrmsethStaff Writer
March 14, 2024 1:08 PM PT

Authorities this week charged 13 people with collecting money from drug sales and extorted commissary goods inside the Los Angeles County jails on behalf of Michael “Mosca” Torres, a Mexican Mafia member who controlled the jail rackets until his death in July.
The case filed Wednesday by Los Angeles County prosecutors offers yet another illustration of how the Mexican Mafia, a prison-based syndicate of Latino gang members, controls and extracts money from inmates held at the nation’s largest jail complex.
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 02, 2019 Los Angeles County Sheriff's Commander Jason Wolak who oversees Custody Services Division-General Population tours the Men's Central Jail located at 441 Bauchet St in downtown Los Angeles on October 02, 2019. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

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Torres, 59, oversaw this system using contraband cellphones in a state prison hundreds of miles away, where he was serving a sentence of 133 years to life for attempted murder, conspiracy and witness tampering. Said to have been inducted into the Mexican Mafia in 1994, Torres was stabbed to death in the exercise yard at California State Prison, Sacramento, on July 6 in what law enforcement officials suspect was an internal power struggle over control of the L.A. County jails.

Michael Torres

Michael Torres, a member of the Mexican Mafia, was stabbed to death on July 6 at California State Prison, Sacramento.

(California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation)
The crimes alleged in Thursday’s case predate Torres’ death. The defendants are charged with extortion, conspiring to commit extortion, gang participation, smuggling drugs into a jail, conspiring to smuggle drugs into a jail and conspiring to commit assault.

The case centers around Jose Martinez, 35, a reputed member of the Rockwood gang nicknamed “Duke,” who was described in a police report as an “out of custody facilitator.” Martinez is accused in court documents of relaying messages between inmates and gathering money from the sales of drugs. He also allegedly collected the proceeds of extorted commissary goods.
FILE - This Sept. 28, 2011, photo, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Men's Central Jail facility shows in Los Angeles. Los Angeles County has cancelled a nearly $2 billion contract to replace an aging jail after criticism that it needs better ways to deal with a growing population of the mentally ill. County supervisors on Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2019, voted to scrap the contract to replace the Men's Central Jail with a mental health treatment center that critics said was simply another jail. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

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Police reports reviewed by The Times state that for every $10 a Latino inmate spends at the jail’s commissary on snacks, clothing or hygiene supplies, he must contribute $1.50 worth of goods to a collection called the “kitty.” Those items are then resold, creating a secondary market that is cheaper than the jail-authorized one. “The contribution of purchased items was enforced with violence and the threat of violence,” prosecutors wrote in a complaint.

On a recorded jail phone in March 2022, Martinez told Pharoah Brooks, 46, an alleged Clanton 14 gang member called “Blackie,” that Brooks needed to come up with $600 a week in kitty sales from the dormitory he oversaw at North County Correctional Facility, according to a police report.
North County Correctional Facility in Castaic

An inside view of the North County Correctional Facility in Castaic.

(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
Brooks allegedly promised Martinez he would “forward all — all the grocery money to you,” which investigators believed was either kitty or drug proceeds. Narcotics are sold at a staggering markup in the county jails. A gram of heroin worth $50 on the street, for example, can cost 20 times that in jail.
When sheriff’s deputies and FBI agents raided Martinez’s home in Compton in 2022, they seized envelopes stuffed with cash that were earmarked for different “shot callers” within the jail, according to a police report.
Authorities also found, hidden inside a book in the Compton home, handwritten “roll calls” that listed the names, gangs, nicknames, booking numbers and court dates for all Latino inmates in the jails. This documentation, the report says, allows the Mexican Mafia to “track down persons in bad standing, persons that owe money, to coordinate the movement of drugs and communications, to account for taxation revenue such as the kitty and other enterprise business.”

Attorney Gabriel Zendejas-Chavez, front, leaves the federal courthouse in downtown Los Angeles
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Martinez and Brooks were recorded discussing an inmate who was holding himself out as a Mexican Mafia member, according to a police report. Saying the man was called “Mikey from Florence,” Brooks asked Martinez to “run a make on that.”
Posing as a Mexican Mafia member can draw a death sentence from the gang. Torres had been serving life in prison for shooting a San Fernando Valley gang member in 2003 who was shaking down drug dealers and prostitutes by falsely claiming to represent the organization.
After speaking to Brooks, Martinez got a call from another inmate, Marco “Mugsy” Lujan, according to a police report. Martinez told Lujan, 46, a reputed member of the Laguna Park Vikings, that “uncle” confirmed the supposed Mexican Mafia member “does not exist.”
“OK,” Lujan replied, according to the report. “We are going to take him out.”
Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic

The exterior of Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic.

(Los Angeles Times)
A day later, three inmates attacked a “completely defenseless” Michael Nunez in his dormitory at North County Correctional Facility, the police report says. Nunez curled up on the floor as Ariel Pereyra, Andy Dominguez and Angel Grajales allegedly beat him for a minute and 30 seconds until sheriff’s deputies broke it up, according to the report. Nunez was hospitalized with head trauma.
The charges unsealed this week show little has changed in the operations of the jail rackets since Torres first implemented them while awaiting trial 20 years ago.
Just as Martinez is alleged to have relayed orders and collected money from outside jail, Torres used his wife to field calls from inmates and manage his money, according to recorded calls played at his trial. Deputies also seized from a Torres underling two roll call lists and several handwritten messages from his boss.
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“I’m suppose to be receiving money from you vatos once a month,” one read, “and so far for the last 3 [months] I haven’t received nada. ... So to avoid any [confusion] this is how it’s going to work from now on. Whenever one of you have money for me, you’ll have your senora” — lady “put it on my books and then have her give a note to my senora for me stating how much and who it’s from. This way I’ll know for sure who’s money is coming in and who’s not.”
Another was addressed to a shot caller who had been collecting money from a jail facility in Castaic.
Inmates walk through the exercise yard at California State Prison Sacramento, near Folsom, Calif.
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“Months have passed and I haven’t received nada,” Torres wrote, “so either you’re pocketing it or you have it. Produce it or get dealt with. This is no exceptions. If people want to take my kindness for weakness then step up.”
When Torres was held at the lockup in downtown L.A., a detective testified, inmates turned to him before submitting to guards’ commands. “They would shout out things like, ‘M, do I comply?’ Or, ‘Hey carnal, do I go along with the program?’ Things of that nature,” Det. Javier Clift testified. “And Mr. Torres always told them, ‘Go ahead.’”
“Very polite man,” Clift said of Torres, adding: “You have to be very careful with these guys, because they know how to work individuals and try to get on their good side.”


 
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by Contributing Editor
March 15, 2024

Authorities Friday announced that 13 members or associates of the Mexican Mafia prison gang have been charged by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office for their roles in a narcotic smuggling operation and violent assault that took place within Los Angeles County jail system, two of whom are fugitives.
“Two of the defendants charged were arrested on Thursday and one was arrested today,” Laura Eimiller of the FBI said in a statement on Friday morning.
“Two are being sought by members of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI’s San Gabriel Valley Safe Streets Task Force,” Eimiller said. “Eight defendants charged were already incarcerated on unrelated charges.”

According to Eimiller, Estela Guerrero, 50, of Long Beach, and Daniel Arochi-Gonzalez, 24, of Carson, were arrested Thursday at their homes. Rosa Christina Martinez, 35, was arrested Friday in Compton. Marco Lujan, 47, and Ariel Pereyra, 28, are being sought.
The following defendants charged in the case are currently incarcerated on unrelated charges: Jose Martinez, 36, Pharoah Brooks, 47, David Fraysure, 28, Jackie Triplett, 40, Jessie Quintero, 44, Andy Dominguez, 30, Angel Grajales, 33, and Daniel Garcia, 37.
The investigation began in February of 2022, following reports that narcotics had been smuggled into the Los Angeles County Jail, as well as a report of a violent attack of an inmate within the jail, Eimiller said.
“The narcotics smuggling and violent assault are alleged to have been coordinated by several high-ranking associates of the Mexican Mafia from outside of the jail under the authority of a Mexican Mafia member in state prison,” Eimiller said. “That inmate had been charged with operating inside of a Los Angeles County facility on behalf of the Mexican Mafia criminal enterprise.”

According to investigators and deputy district attorneys who filed the case being announced Friday, a Mexican Mafia “facilitator” allegedly relayed orders to Mexican Mafia associates within the Los Angeles County jail — known as “Sureños” or “soldiers” — to attack an individual who had falsely claimed to be a member of the Mexican Mafia, which is “an act considered to be a serious violation to the criminal organization.” Eimiller said.

“On orders passed through the facilitator, multiple Sureños are alleged to have attacked the victim who was transported to a hospital for treatment of his injuries,” Eimiller said.

“During the investigation, a Mexican Mafia secretary and inmates — known as “shotcallers” — in leadership positions for the Mexican Mafia, allegedly coordinated the movement of drugs that had been smuggled into the jail, Eimiller said.

According to investigators, the narcotics were moved to different locations within the jail to be sold to other inmates for the collection of Mexican Mafia proceeds, Eimiller said.

In another incident, a Mexican Mafia shotcaller within the jail allegedly reported to a facilitator that narcotics which belonged to a Mexican Mafia member had been smuggled into the jail by an inmate, Eimiller said.

“As a result, investigators were able to identify the inmate in possession of the drugs,” Eimiller said. “Deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department seized over 30 grams of heroin.”

A search warrant at the alleged facilitator’s residence resulted in the seizure of about 10 ounces of methamphetamine, a firearm, numerous Mexican Mafia communications and about $16,000 in cash found in envelopes labeled with the names of several shotcallers within the jail, Eimiller said.

The case was filed and is being prosecuted by Deputy-In-Charge Lou Avila and Deputy District Attorney Abbigail Briones with the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office’s Prison Crimes Unit.

Authorities circulated photos of the two fugitives — Marco Lujan and Ariel Pereyra — and urged anyone knowing their whereabouts to call their nearest FBI Office or the nearest U.S. Embassy or Consulate. The FBI in Los Angeles can be reached at 310-477-6565. Tips can also be provided at tips.fbi.gov.
 
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