Crime & Safety

Violent International Gang Members From Somerset, Union Counties Sentenced

The five men were sentenced for their roles in the gang that included murder, extortion, and plots to kill witnesses: authorities

Five members of the violent international street gang “La Mara Salvatrucha,” or “MS-13” — who are from Somerset and Union counties — were sentenced for their roles that included murder, extortion, and plots to kill witnesses, authorities said.

Santos Reyes-Villatoro, a/k/a “Mousey,” 43, of Bound Brook, Julian Moz-Aguilar, a/k/a “Humilde,” 29, of Plainfield, and Hugo Palencia, a/k/a “Taliban,” 24, of Plainfield, were each sentenced today to life plus 10 years in prison.

Mario Oliva, a/k/a “Zorro,” 30, and Esau Ramirez, a/k/a “Panda,” 25, both of Plainfield, were sentenced Nov. 27 to life plus 10 years in prison and 169 months in prison, respectively, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman and Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division announced Wednesday.

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All of the five alleged gang members were previously convicted following a 16-week trial before U.S. District Judge Stanley R. Chesler, who imposed the sentences this week in Newark federal court.

Reyes-Villatoro, Oliva, Moz-Aguilar, and Palencia were each convicted of racketeering conspiracy, murder in aid of racketeering, use of a firearm in a violent federal crime, and murder resulting from a federal firearm crime.

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Ramirez was convicted of racketeering conspiracy and conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering.

According to the documents filed in this case and the evidence presented at trial:

MS-13 is a national and transnational gang with branches or “cliques” operating throughout the United States, including in Plainfield.

All of the men listed above were members of the “Plainfield Locos Salvatruchas” (PLS) clique of MS-13 that was founded by Reyes-Villatoro and operated in Union, Somerset, and Middlesex counties.

Reyes-Villatoro, Oliva and Roberto Contreras, a/k/a “Demonio,” 28, of Bound Brook, all served as “First Word,” or leader, of PLS.

From 2007 through September 2013, MS-13 members from PLS committed five murders in furtherance of MS-13’s objectives. On Feb. 9, 2009, Reyes-Villatoro, acting as the leader of PLS, drove Moz-Aguilar and other MS-13 members through the streets of Plainfield searching for rival gang members, eventually stopping at the Plainfield train station. There, Moz-Aguilar used a firearm previously provided by Reyes-Villatoro to murder a victim who was believed to be a member of the Latin Kings, a rival gang.

On Feb. 27, 2010, Oliva drove a female member of MS-13 to an empty parking lot in Piscataway, and murdered her because she was suspected of working with law enforcement. Oliva then fled New Jersey with the assistance of Contreras and hid from law enforcement with the MS-13 Pinos clique in Oxon Hill, Maryland.

On Nov. 11, 2010, Palencia drove another MS-13 member to the area around Barack Obama Academy in Plainfield, where they encountered students challenging MS-13. Palencia pulled over, provided a firearm to another MS-13 member and instructed him to shoot at one of the individuals. The MS-13 member shot into the crowd, killing a bystander.

On Jan. 10, 2011, Moz-Aguilar, Contreras and other MS-13 members were in a car when they spotted a suspected 18th Street gang member in front of a restaurant. Contreras stopped the vehicle and an MS-13 member exited, approached the suspected rival gang member and shot him in the head.

On May 8, 2011, Cruz Flores, a/k/a “Bruja,” 30, of Bound Brook, murdered a victim who was caught socializing with 18th Street gang members. Flores and another MS-13 member cut his throat, beat him with a bat and stabbed him in the back 17 times. An MS-13 member involved in this murder fled New Jersey and was driven to Maryland soon after law enforcement began searching for him.

Jose Garcia, a/k/a “Chucky” and “Diabolico,” 24, of Plainfield, recruited and hired MS-13 members from the Maryland-based Pinos clique to come to New Jersey and murder a woman in exchange for $40,000. The Pinos clique members were arrested by authorities as they pulled into Plainfield.

After several MS-13 members were arrested in July 2011, Ramirez and Garcia used phones from inside the Union County jail to order the murder of three witnesses believed to be cooperating with police and responsible for their arrests.

According to evidence presented at trial, members of PLS also were responsible for an attempted murder of suspected Latin King members near a car wash in Plainfield; the attempted murder of suspected Latin King members in January 2009; a machete attack in May 2011 and another in June 2011 on the train tracks passing through Plainfield; an attempted murder shooting in Plainfield in May 2011; and several other violent crimes, including extortion, robbery and several weapons offenses.

The defendants were originally charged in a 26-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in September 2013. As of today, 13 of the 14 individuals charged in that indictment have been convicted. One defendant remains a fugitive. Contreras, Garcia, and Flores await sentencing.

(Image via Shutterstock)



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