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Reputed Bloods gang member charged with Bound Brook murder asks to move trial

Tuesday 29 May 2012

A reputed Bloods gang member charged with fatally shooting a Teaneck man near the Bound Brook train station last year has asked a Superior Court judge to hold his trial somewhere else. James Ford, representing himself in a Somerville courtroom today, said he’s concerned by the publicity of the case and by what he called a violation of his due process rights. "It’s clear I won’t receive true justice here," he told Judge Julie Marino. Ford, 36, of Phillipsburg, and his 22-year-old half-brother, Elijah, of Freemansburg, Pa., allegedly gunned down Damian Williams, 24, and wounded South Bound Brook teenager Kendell Harrell during an apparent gang meeting on March, 19, 2011. Ford has maintained his rights were violated, saying crucial details regarding Williams’ background were kept from the grand jury last May and led to "trumped-up charges." Both brothers are trying to have their indictments dismissed. Offering glimpses of what may have happened the night of the shooting, Ford today recalled how threats on his life and his family forced him to go to the meeting, and that he and his brother were armed because they were entering a dangerous situation. He said Williams was the leader of the gang members and a confidential informant for authorities, and that Williams called the meeting to entrap Ford. The entrapment claims, however, were met with confusion by Marino and the prosecution. "That really, logically, makes absolutely no sense," Assistant Prosecutor W. Brian Stack said. Stack also disputed the argument by Elijah Ford’s attorney, Steven Lember, that the state couldn’t prove his client was anything more than an accomplice. According to Stack, the evidence — such as witness statements that the brothers fired weapons simultaneously — was enough to say he had a bigger role in the crime. Marino said she would decide on the dismissals and change in venue later. She expressed concerns about James Ford’s claim that he and his brother were placed in a holding cell with witnesses in the case. She asked Stack to address the situation with the Somerset County Sheriff’s Office, which oversees the county jail. "That does sound like a recipe for disaster to me," she said. Jail Warden Charles O’Neill and Somerset County Sheriff Frank Provenzano declined to comment. A trial date has not been set.

Gang members indicted for murder in Dodge City

Federal prosecutors in Kansas unsealed charges Friday against 23 members of a Dodge City, Kan., street gang, including counts alleging racketeering and murder. Members of the Nortenos allegedly killed Israel Peralta and wounded another man near a Dodge City trailer park in June 2009, said U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom. “They engaged in drug trafficking, robbery and even murder for the purpose of expanding their power, wealth and influence,” Grissom said. The indictment culminated a two-year investigation of the Nortenos by Dodge City police; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and other law enforcement agencies. The racketeering portion of the indictment includes numerous allegations of violent crimes, including murder, attempted murder and assault with a dangerous weapon. The charges also contend that the Nortenos robbed Guatemalan immigrants who worked in nearby beef packing plants, finding them easy targets because the victims often did not use banks and tried to avoid contact with law enforcement. Dodge City Police Chief Craig Mellecker said increased gang violence prompted authorities to open the investigation. The federal indictment included counts against Jason Najera, 28, who is alleged to have been the leader of the Nortenos. Those facing murder allegations include Pedro Garcia, 25, Gonzalo Ramirez, 26, Russell Worthey, 23, and Anthony Wright, 26. “Gangs of armed men will not be permitted to prey on the weak or to exchange fire while the rest of us scramble for cover,” Grissom said.

Greenville Gang Member Arrested For Shooting

A gang member in Greenville is behind bars today, accused of shooting a fellow gang member one week ago. Greenville police say Rontrell Hooks was arrested Wednesday night. Police officer Drueschler located Hooks on Frontgate Dr. around 10:40 p.m. Police say Hooks ran but was captured after a brief foot chase. Hooks is now charged with Assault With a Deadly Weapon With Intent to Kill for the shooting of Jamar Clark on River Bluff Drive on the afternoon of May 3. Both Clark and Hooks are members of the Bloods street gang, police say. Hooks was also charged with one count each of Resist, Obstruct & Delay, Possession of Marijuana, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Hooks was jailed under a $200,000 secured bond.

Lorain police keep heat on gang members

Sunday 20 May 2012

Although it’s only been two weeks since police started sweeping gang members off the streets, several people in the city are seeing a change in the city. “I think we noticed the difference,” Lt. Mark Carpentiere said. “There’s been no shootings or any other gang related violence. It’s been quiet as far as that’s concerned.” Police have in custody 18 of the 22 targeted members of a gang called MOB for Member of Bloods or Money over Bitches. Police Chief Cel Rivera said there has been a palpable lack of violence since the first round of arrests on May 4 got 11 men and a 16-year-old boy who are suspected gang members and would like to see it stay that way. Police believe the gang is responsible for nine of the last 12 murders in the city in the past four years and a slew of other violent crimes including home invasions, shootings, intimidation and drug trafficking. Rivera has received several letters and comments from people thanking police for this operation. He said officers have also said they feel that it’s been safer on the streets for them. Ward 4 Councilman Bret Schuster praises the Lorain Police Department for keeping the city safe. “I can’t say enough about the effort put forth by all the members of the police department who were involved in making the arrests. They haven’t completed the job yet, but it’s going to have a big impact on the city of Lorain,” he said. He added that several constituents have expressed that they are pleased with the work the police has done. The seven-month operation began when police turned to the Northern Ohio Violent Crime Consortium to learn about new techniques to fight crime. NOVCC introduced them to new software, Analyst’s Notebook, which the Lorain Police Department purchased for the operation. Police enter data names and dates into a computer. The program identifies relationships, where the violent crimes were taking place, who was arrested and who was accused. The names that popped up as the most active criminals were among the 22 that were targeted.

Bust of gang offers hope for Dodge City immigrants

The scars on Jose Aguilar’s hands are pretty standard stuff for a man who’s made a rough living carving up cattle. He dismisses them as “nada” — nothing. It’s the mark on his scalp, where he was clubbed with a tire iron, that leaves a lasting mark on his psyche. Aguilar is like so many immigrant workers in town who provide easy prey for American born-and-bred Latino gang bangers. He’s in the country illegally. He speaks virtually no English. He is, he says, essentially illiterate even in Spanish. Many of his fellow Guatemalan expatriate slaughterhouse workers don’t use banks, consequently carrying and stashing cash — drawing robbers like ants to a picnic. They’re also smaller than just about everybody else in Dodge City. And they tend not to call the cops. So the thugs who busted into his home a few years ago could reasonably think they could bully him as they pleased. “They can do what they want to us,” said Aguilar, who’s scheduled for deportation this summer. That may be changing. The message from the Dodge City police chief that even immigrants in the country illegally should call for help — “we want to protect them from crime, and that’s it” — seems to be getting through. And earlier this month 23 members of the Nortenos gang in Dodge City were swept up in a federal racketeering indictment with allegations ranging from robbery to murder. The resulting arrests have carved the heart out of what has been a harrying presence in the poorest neighborhoods on the east and south sides of town. For years the gang had posed a menace in Dodge City: red-clad young men dealing methamphetamine and robbing the transient immigrants who flock to jobs in western Kansas slaughterhouses. It’s tempting to look at what’s been happening in Dodge City in recent years as Latino-on-Latino crime. Indeed, some of what was spelled out in the racketeering indictment stems from gang tit-for-tat, beatings that begat payback stabbings that spawned drive-by shootings between rival outfits. Yet what sustained the only occasionally employed gang members, police and prosecutors say, was ruthless extortion of immigrants, people who came to western Kansas — some legally, some not — to eke out a modest living in the stench and tedium of beef packing plants. One 30-year-old man supports his small family — and sends hundreds of dollars each month back to relatives in Guatemala — carving the bones out of chuck roast at the National Beef Packing Co. plant in Dodge City. He remains, he says, constantly aware of young men with the cholo look of tough guys. “I don’t go out at night. I don’t walk places,” said the man, who spoke through a translator and asked not to be named because he’s in the country illegally. “I avoid people I don’t know.” Too many of his friends have been robbed coming from check-cashing shops or had their doors kicked in by robbers in gang colors. Gang presence Police say gangs first gained a toehold in Dodge City in the early 1990s. Then, as now, the members were teenagers and young men who adopted the name and aesthetic of the Nortenos —a gang born in California prisons. Nortenos, Spanish for northerners, named themselves such because they came mostly from northern reaches of the state. Surenos, or southerners, are their chief Latino rivals. Police say the connection between the large California gangs and those in Dodge City is the loosest of affiliations. The Dodge City guys, they say, mostly copied what they could learn about the Californians. The Dodge City Police Department sees the local gang bangers as a bunch of knuckleheads, albeit dangerous knuckleheads willing to threaten cops and not much concerned about the peril they pose to people sometimes caught in the Nortenos-Surenos crossfire. Cops describe the membership as guys who rarely take legitimate jobs, who both sell and use meth. Despite their robberies and burglaries, they seem always to be in need of more cash. And nearly always, particularly on the Thursdays when packing house workers get paid, that needed cash is never too far away. “The Guatemalans who come here are hard-working people,” said Sister Angela Erevia, the director of Hispanic ministry for the Catholic Diocese of Dodge City. “They’re also very docile.” So it became all too commonplace for young workers leaving a convenience store to be beaten by far bigger, often armed, gang members for the money they’d just pocketed after cashing their paychecks. Just as common were night-time break-ins, where typically four to six men, often masking their faces with bandanas, would kick in the doors of the rental homes of Guatemalans. “Happened all the time,” said Dodge City Police Lt. Colleen Brooks. “These guys would pistol whip anybody.” Afterward, threatened with murder and fearful that contact with any authorities might invite deportation, immigrants have often kept such attacks to themselves, Brooks said. Donald Stull has been studying the crossroads of immigration and meat packing for years. The University of Kansas anthropologist describes desperate workers taking jobs that few American-born folks are willing to tackle. The packing houses are basically disassembly plants that reduce giant herds of cattle into sirloins and hamburger at an incredible clip. (The Cargill plant in Dodge City, for instance, employs about 2,700 people slaughtering 6,000 animals a day.) The immigrant workers may be reluctant to use banks because they never have, he said. And they can be reluctant to seek help from police for cultural reasons even if they’re in the country legally. “White Americans tend to think the policeman is generally your friend,” Stull said. “It very easily might not have been that way if you grew up in Guatemala, where he wasn’t necessarily there to help you.” Dodge City Police Chief Craig Mellecker said his department went to local churches for help. (Services at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Sunday afternoons are conducted in the Guatemalan dialect of Quiché for parishioners who speak neither English nor Spanish.) The department gave tips on how to identify gangs from their tattoos and the way they dress and gave advice on using banks. “Mostly, we wanted to get across the message that we didn’t care about their (immigration) status,” Mellecker said. Meantime, the Police Department started working with agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives about three years ago. The ATF was interested in the illegal use and sale of guns. Gang members are accused of selling guns stolen in burglaries on a black market. That opened up an opportunity for federal involvement, resulting in federal racketeering charges. Building a case Investigators slowly began piecing together a case that would put the Nortenos in reach of the federal courts and their famously tough sentencing standards. U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said the case posed a chance to rid Dodge City’s streets of its latter day gunslingers. It could be hard at times getting victims to cooperate because so many feared that stepping forward would either put them at risk of gang retaliation or expose anyone in a household whose immigration status was dicey. “We didn’t care about that,” Grissom said. “The bullets don’t separate who’s documented and who’s not.” It led to a case that Grissom took to a grand jury this spring and that produced an indictment returned in mid-April. The charges remained under court seal for almost four weeks until all but one of the defendants was arrested. The 38-count indictment named the reputed leader of the local Nortenos, 28-year-old Jason Najera, and a cast of characters with nicknames such as Wee Wee, Pistol Pete, Cheese, Beaver, Shrek and Bugsy. They formed two local chapters of the Nortenos, the larger Diablo Viejos (old devils) and mostly older gang members that go by LCC (an acronym for a vulgarism). Just one of the nearly two dozen men charged in the case was identified as an illegal immigrant. The grand jury contended the Nortenos aimed at “keeping victims in fear of the enterprise and in fear of its members and associates through actual violence and threats of violence.” To that end, according to the charges, gang leaders demanded potential members commit at least two acts of drug peddling, robbery or murder to earn a place in the Nortenos. Doing so, the charges allege, established their standing within what amounted to a miniature crime syndicate as defined by the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organization Act, or RICO. Crimes alleged in the indictment date back to 2008 and stretch to this February. They include multiple conspiracies to commit murder, including in the killing of Israel Peralta and the wounding of another man outside a Dodge City trailer park. Police believe that incident stemmed from Nortenos mistaking a beer-drinking group of men for their rivals, the Surenos. Some of the other crimes stem from what authorities view as gang-on-gang violence. Most of the victims, however, were meat cutters, targeted by the gang for their vulnerability, authorities say. The cinching of the indictment elated the Dodge City cops, who quickly mobilized teams to round up the defendants. Over the last two decades, the city has seen gang crime rise and fade, often peaking before a big bust, then peaking again when key players walk out of jail. This, though, is hoped to be different. RICO convictions could lead to prison sentences that convert young suspects into middle-aged convicts. Rounding up 23 gang members in Dodge City, said U.S. Attorney Grissom, is akin to arresting 200 in Kansas City. The city is ringed by grain elevators that supply sustenance to surrounding feedlots where the cattle are fattened before slaughter. Its main drag is Wyatt Earp Boulevard, now filled with chain restaurants and motels. Dodge City is home to about 27,000 people on the eastern edge of the Great Plains. Its industry is anchored by two large packing plants. They’ve helped keep unemployment below 5 percent. Unlike much of western Kansas, Dodge City has been growing steadily in the 21st century on the same cattle trade that founded the community in the 19th century. The difference now is that immigrant packing house workers continue to shift its demographics. In 2000, the city was about 43 percent Latino. Today that number is more than 57 percent. Now Dodge is bracing for what the racketeering case could bring. The disappearance of significant numbers of Nortenos in the past has led to a bolder Sureno gang, and vice versa. But local authorities hope the racketeering case sends an intimidating message to gang members that the possibility of stiff prison terms makes the thug life unattractive. At the same time, there’s hope that it adds to gradual gains in the willingness of immigrant packing house workers to come forward about beatings and robberies. “I don’t want this place to be like some border town where everybody’s always living in fear,” said Rebecca Escalante, the owner of Becky’s Bail Bonds and Income Tax Service. “Maybe this will help.” Yet the gains are tentative. To so many of the immigrants there’s a sameness to American law enforcement types. For those in Kansas illegally, there’s always the worry of raids of undocumented workers by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. “We could be back,” said Brooks of the Dodge City police force, “to them being scared of all of us.”

Pocahontas the stripper wanted over shooting and robbery in Texas

Tuesday 15 May 2012

A stripper known as Pocahontas was on the run after being charged with murder for setting up a robbery in which a man was shot and killed by her two accomplices. Luerissie Ashley Ross, 20, arranged to meet Budrohoe Briscoe on February 17 in Houston, Texas after texting him photographs of herself. Mr Briscoe had gone with a friend to pick up the stripper who he described as a 'friend' at an apartment complex. The 20-year-old woman took a phone call while with the two men in which she was heard to say: 'Yes, there are two of them', according to ABC13. The men then drove Pocahontas to her apartment because she needed to collect her cell phone charger. Briscoe was lured out of his vehicle by the stripper where two men were lying in wait. They robbed and shot Briscoe. He died in hospital from his injuries on February 29. According to local police, Ross had been working at a gentleman's club called Ice Cream Castles. She was said to have been involved in a similar attack at the apartment complex a month earlier.  Police later recovered digital images of the exotic dancer from Briscoe's phone.

Shootings not my fault, says ex-bikie Wissam Amer

Sunday 13 May 2012

THE man believed by police to be the central figure in a bikie feud has declared he is not at fault for Sydney's spate of drive-by shootings and says they are the "act of a coward". Wissam Amer, 28, broke his silence to The Sunday Telegraph to say he was not at the heart of the current shootings between the Hells Angels and Nomads outlaw motorcycle gangs. Last week The Sunday Telegraph revealed police believe Amer was the source of the conflict after he defected from the Hells Angels to the rival Nomads. Speaking through his lawyer Maggie Sten, the former bikie said unequivocally that he was no longer part of any gang and disputed police claims he's responsible for the feud. "The conflict between the Hells Angels and the Nomads is dead and buried - it has been for a while," Mr Amer said through his lawyer. "It has got nothing to do with me." Mr Amer was previously a member of the Bandidos, but left the group during a large scale "patch-over" of its members to the Hells Angels more than a year ago. Police believe he then tried to leave the Hells Angels to join the Nomads and burned bridges along the way - however he disputes this. Ms Sten said Mr Amer now wants to clear the record and confirm he is not part of any gang and is attempting to get on with a "normal life". What is not in dispute, however, is that Mr Amer was the target of two drive-by shootings over the past seven months. One was a drive-by at a Merrylands Oporto, two days after he was released on bail; the other happened three days later at his previous address at Canley Vale. Police believe both attacks were committed by Hells Angels, however Mr Amer said he could not prove this and neither could police. Mr Amer is unsure who the perpetrators were. "It could have been anybody - it's a dirty game, it could have been someone that I'd had a run-in with years ago," Ms Sten said on Mr Amer's behalf. "I live my life with no fear - I live now as a normal person." What Mr Amer was sure about was that drive-by shootings on himself or anyone else was a despicable act. "It's as weak as scratching somebody's car - anybody who drives a car and attacks you at 1am is a coward," he said through Ms Sten. "Especially when you know the people you're looking for are not there," referring to cases where the alleged targets were in jail. He could not explain the forces behind the current wave of shootings, but agreed with a police theory - revealed by The Sunday Telegraph - that a third party is trying to reignite animosities between the groups. Authorities brokered a peace agreement between the two gangs in January, but that faltered on April 16 when shots were fired at a home and car in Pemulwuy. "We believe it's other people trying to stir the pot," Ms Sten said for Mr Amer. "This is the perfect time for people to attack because they know the Hells Angels and Nomads were in a previous conflict which no longer exists." Police Strike Force Kinnarra has locked up 13 people in relation to the nine shootings that happened last month. Detective Superintendent Arthur Katsogiannis said the conflict was firmly between the two gangs.

US blacklists sons of Mexico drug lord Joaquin Guzman

Thursday 10 May 2012

The US treasury department has put two sons of Mexico's most wanted man Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman on its drugs kingpin blacklist. The move bars all people in the US from doing business with Ivan Archivaldo Guzman Salazar and Ovidio Guzman Lopez, and freezes any US assets they have. Joaquin Guzman, on the list since 2001, runs the powerful Sinaloa drug cartel. Mexico has seen an explosion of violence in recent years as gangs fight for control of trafficking routes. The US administration "will aggressively target those individuals who facilitate Chapo Guzman's drug trafficking operations, including family members," said Adam Szubin, director of the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control . "With the Mexican government, we are firm in our resolve to dismantle Chapo Guzman's drug trafficking organisation." Ovidio Guzman plays a significant role in his father's drug-trafficking activities, the treasury department said. Ivan Archivaldo Guzman was arrested in 2005 in Mexico on money-laundering charges but subsequently released. As well as the Guzman brothers, two other alleged key cartel members, Noel Salgueiro Nevarez and Ovidio Limon Sanchez, were listed under the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act. They were both arrested in Mexico in 2011 and are still in custody. Under the Kingpin Act, US firms, banks and individuals are prevented from doing business with them and any assets the men may have under US jurisdiction are frozen. More than 1,000 companies and individuals linked to 94 drug kingpins have been placed on the blacklist since 2000. Penalties for violating the act range include up to 30 years in prison and fines up to $10m (£6m). The US has offered a reward of up to $5m a for information leading to the arrest of Joaquin Guzman, who escaped from a Mexican prison in 2001.

Female Hit Squad Leader Linked to 20 Murders Arrested

PHOTO: In this photo taken Monday, May 7, 2012, Maria Jimenez, nicknamed "La Tosca," or "the rough one" is presented to the media in Monterrey, Mexico.
 

 

Mexican police say they have arrested a female drug cartel assassin whose hit squad carried out at least 20 murders, including a hit on a policeman.

Maria Jimenez, AKA La Tosca, or "The Tough One," allegedly led a group that included men, women and teens and was paid $1,700 a month by Los Zetas, Mexico's most violent and second-biggest drug cartel, to carry out hits in Monterey, Nuevo Laredo and other cities in Northern Mexico.

According to the Mexican newspaper El Milenio, police said Jimenez "was directly involved" in the murder of Detective Antonio Montiel, who was killed in his pick-up truck by a fusillade of .9 mm bullets. Jimenez allegedly used an ATV to cut off Montiel's vehicle and force him to stop.

Jimenez, 26, and her alleged accomplices were arrested in a stolen gray van on May 1 in Monterrey.The Zetas cartel, which controls the drug trade in much of the north and east of Mexico, is considered the main rival to the Sinaloa cartel for dominance. The cartel was formed by a group of former soldiers hired in 1999 as a private army by the Gulf Cartel who then split off to form their own rival drug trafficking organization. Many members have police or military backgrounds, including some soldiers who have special forces training.

The Zetas, who also operates in Guatemala, have been a major target of Mexican President Felipe Calderon's attempted crackdown on drug cartels. More than 50,000 people have died in the crackdown, and the Mexican Attorney General estimates that 7 percent of the casualties are military or police officers.

Reputed gang member who allegedly held open the sliding door of a van so fellow gang members could gun down a rival was found guilty today of first-degree murder.

 Ruben Hernandez, 28, who already is serving a lengthy sentence for another gang-related homicide, was found guilty of the 2005 slaying of Michael Moore, 30, of Aurora, and the attempted murder of Moore’s passenger, who was wounded in the shooting. Moore was killed Nov. 28, 2005, near the intersection of Galena and East boulevards in Aurora, when the van pulled alongside his car and someone inside opened fire, according to authorities. Hernandez did not shoot, but his actions made him accountable in the slaying, said Kane County Judge Allen Anderson, who presided over Hernandez’s bench trial. “The defendant was present and involved,” the judge said. Witnesses testified at the trial, which took place May 1-3, that Moore’s passenger, a reputed gang member, had gotten into a verbal altercation three days before the shooting with members of Hernandez’s gang. The alleged shooter is awaiting trial. Hernandez’s sentencing was set for July 2, but the outcome is not in doubt – he will automatically receive a life sentence since it is his second conviction on a homicide. He is currently serving a 40-year sentence for beating a man to death in anther gang-related slaying.

FBI offers up to $100,000 for info leading to capture of Eduardo Ravelo

Monday 7 May 2012

Eduardo Ravelo, born on October 13, 1968 was added as the 493rd fugitive to the FBI 10 most wanted list on October 20, 2009. He is originally from Mexico, however he holds permanent residency status in the United States which gives him free movement across the border. An FBI informant and former lieutenant in the Barrio Azteca, a prison gang active in the U.S. and Mexico, testified that Ravelo told him to help find fellow gang members who had stolen from the cartel. In March 2008, he became the leader of the gang shortly after betraying his predecessor, stabbing him several times and shooting him in the neck. (Eduardo Ravelo: Wikipedia) Eduardo Ravelo was indicted in Texas in 2008 for his involvement in racketeering activities, conspiracy to launder monetary instruments, and conspiracy to possess heroin, cocaine and marijuana with the intent to distribute. His alleged criminal activities began in 2003. He is believed to be living in an area of Cuidad Juarez controlled by the Barrio Ravelo, with his wife and children just across the border from El Paso, Texas. He is also said to have bodyguards and armored vehicles to protect him from rival gangs as well as rival cartels.

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