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Calling him a "vicious, heartless murderer," a federal judge in San Francisco Wednesday imposed a sentence of life plus ten years in prison on an MS-13 gang member accused of participating in the gunfire slaying of a college student

Calling him a "vicious, heartless murderer," a federal judge in San Francisco Wednesday imposed a sentence of life plus ten years in prison on an MS-13 gang member accused of participating in the gunfire slaying of a college student in Daly City in 2009.
Danilo Velasquez, said by his defense lawyer to be between somewhere between 28 and 32 years old, was convicted by a jury in the court of U.S. District Judge William Alsup in November of four charges, including racketeering conspiracy and murder conspiracy.
"If you're going to be in a conspiracy to murder, you ought to know the prison doors will close behind you and you will never see the blue sky again," Alsup said as he pronounced the sentence.
Federal prosecutors claimed at the trial that Velasquez was one of three MS-13 members who killed Moises Frias Jr., 21, and severely wounded two of his three companions in their car near the Daly City BART station on Feb. 19, 2009.
The MS-13 members were allegedly hunting for members of the rival Nortenos gang and mistook the young men, who had no gang affiliations, for Nortenos because three of them were wearing red clothing or caps. Red is the Norteno color.
Velasquez was not specifically convicted of Frias's murder, but rather of generally conspiring to racketeer, or engage in a criminal enterprise, and plotting to commit murders in aid of racketeering.
But Alsup made a specific finding during today's sentencing that Velasquez did take part in the 2009 slaying.
"The defendant directly participated in the murder of Moises Frias on Feb. 19, 2009," Alsup said.
"There is no doubt about that on this record," the judge said.
The finding provided the basis for Alsup to order Velasquez to pay $21,650 in restitution, at the rate of $100 per year from his future prison work wages, to Frias's family for funeral expenses.
Frias was studying business at San Francisco City College while working part-time for the city's Public Utilities Commission and his three friends were college or law students.
The men were on their way to have a drink at a Daly City restaurant when a car drove up behind them at about 7:10 p.m. and two men jumped out, flanked the victims' vehicle and began firing with semi-automatic weapons.
Prosecutors say that Velasquez, using a 9 millimeter Luger that jammed several times, shot into the right side of the car and wounded two of Frias's friends and sent a bullet through the cap of a third.
MS-13 member Jaime Balam, who is a fugitive, shot into the left side of the car and killed Frias in the back passenger seat with nine gunshots to the head, prosecutors allege.

The third attacker, MS-13 member Luis Herrera, 20, pleaded guilty in November to seven charges, including racketeering and murder conspiracy, and admitted to driving Velasquez and Balam to and from the shooting scene.
Alsup sentenced Herrera last month to 35 years in prison, the term agreed to in Herrera's plea bargain.
Frias's mother, father and sister gave emotional and angry victim-impact testimony during today's sentencing of Velasquez, whose gang name was "Triste," the Spanish word for sad.

"I still remember the day we were told that Moises had died," said Adriana Frias, his mother.
"It is three years now that I have been feeling the pain in my chest.  He did not deserve to die like this," she said.
Citing the testimony of her son's companions, she said, "He was still begging at them to stop shooting at him."
Looking at Velasquez, she said, "You are called Triste. I hope that in jail you die of sadness. I will never forgive you guys for what you did to my son."
The father, Moises Frias Sr., told Alsup, "This type of people should never ever be allowed to get out of jail. Let them rot there.
"I am suffering day to day since three years ago. Every morning I wake up and I think of my son," the father said.
Defense attorney Jennifer Schwartz unsuccessfully sought a 35-year sentence. She argued that Velasquez was impaired by having suffered physical and sexual abuse and witnessed civil war violence during his childhood in a remote Mayan village in Guatemala.
Velasquez made his way to the United States with a cousin sometime between the ages of 11 and 14, she said.
Schwartz argued that Velasquez was considered "slow" and "shy" by people who knew him in San Francisco and was not a leader of the gang.
But prosecutors contend that Velasquez stepped in to become a leader of an MS-13 branch centered at 20th and Mission streets in San Francisco after 26 other Bay Area gang members were arrested in an initial wave of federal racketeering and other charges in October 2008.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Scoble said at the sentencing, "The picture is not of someone who is vulnerable, is easily manipulated and has lost his way. The picture is one of a gang member who jumped in with both feet, stayed in the gang and rose through the ranks." 
Scoble said expert testimony at the trial showed that Velasquez was malingering, or deliberately trying to appear impaired, on psychological tests.
Alsup agreed, saying, "He was malingering and I don't fall for it."
"He knew perfectly well he was in a conspiracy to kill and murder innocent people. This defendant is a vicious, heartless murderer," the judge said.
Asked at the sentencing whether he wanted to make a statement, Velasquez said only that he wanted to appeal.
In addition to the racketeering and murder conspiracy charges, Velasquez was convicted of conspiring to commit assault with a dangerous weapon and using a gun in a violent crime.
In all, 34 members and associates of the MS-13, or Mara Salvatrucha, gang, including Velasquez and Herrera, were charged in four successive versions of a federal grand jury indictment in San Francisco in 2008 and 2009.
The indictments alleged that gang members carried out six murders of rival gang members or people mistaken for rivals on San Francisco and Daly City streets in 2008 and 2009, including the murder of Frias. 
Thirty-one defendants have pleaded guilty or been convicted of various charges, including six others whom Alsup sentenced to life in prison for racketeering and murder conspiracy.
Two were acquitted in previous trials. The remaining defendant, Manuel Franco, 26, is now on trial in Alsup's court on conspiracy charges. The jury in that case has been deliberating since Feb. 7.
The international MS-13 gang originated in El Salvador and Southern California. Prosecutors contend members engage in murder, assault, drug dealing, theft and extortion, and gain status by attacking and killing rival gang members.DISCLAIMER:Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyright to any such text. Copyright remains with the original copyright holder.

Cops take down Bloods street gang members

 

Law enforcement, members of the Safe Streets Task Force, conducted early morning raids and made arrests on suspected Bloods gang members and drug dealers in the Middletown/Town of Wallkill area. They operated as the “Middletown Organization,” which obtained heroin, crack cocaine and cocaine from suppliers in the Bronx and elsewhere, and bringing it to Middletown for distribution. Most of the raids occurred before dawn. A total of 33 people have been named in a federal indictment that was unsealed Thursday. According to the court document, core members routinely brought narcotics to a location that the Middletown Organization members referred to as the “Sneaker Store.” That was used to distribute the drugs, including to another point called the “Studio.” Those locations were moved from time to time to avoid detection by law enforcement. The indictment alleges that the Middletown Organization maintained firearms for use by members at both locations to protect their narcotics proceeds.  The allegations against the 33 defendants covered the period of from January 2010 through or about February 2012. Local, state and Orange County Sheriff’s officers were involved. This is the latest in Safe Streets Task Force raids in Orange County. On at least two occasions, law enforcement arrested large numbers of gang members of a number of violent and drug crimes in Newburgh. Thursday’s were not conducted in that city. Middletown Police Chief Ramon Bethencourt said that Mayor Joseph DeStefano and he are “confident that this investigation will lead to a reduction in crime and make Middletown a better, safer place to live.”             District Attorney Frank Phillips said gang members arrested “use violence to terrorize the community while engaging in the drug trade.” He criticized the state’ so-called drug law reform, saying it has “essentially eliminated the ability of police and prosecutors to dismantle these criminal enterprises, and the federal commitment has helped tremendously to reduce the level of drug gang violence.” Sheriff Carl DuBois said his Gang Intelligence Unit compiles and shares information with other law enforcement agencies, including the FBI. “Most of the people in the Hudson Valley who have been arrested one time or another come through my facility so we have all the pedigree, different addresses they may have lived at, so there is quite a bit when it comes to the gang intel part of the operation,” DuBois said. Those named in the indicted are: Quiane Williams, also known as Splash and S-dot; Curtis Mack, also known as KB, K, Meech, and Meeks; Stephone Herring, also known as Esco and Frank; Wilfredo Gonzalez, also known as Will’ Michael Giles, also known as Slick; Anthony Webb, also known as Slick; Antoine Webb, also known as Twan, Capo and Tall; Kevin Williams, also known as Fats; Henry Brinson, also known as Hen Roc; Maurice Colon, also known as Flirt; Rasun King, also known as Green Eyes; Hector Batista, also known as Hec; Jeremy Scott Allen, also known as Tampa; Christopher Anderson, also known as B.O., Bobby and bobby Drama; Victor Burns, also known as V-12; Loren Dwyer, also known as L Burna; Tayshawn Fields, also known as Breeze; Raven Fuentes; Matthew Garcia, also known as Pink and Pinky; Victor Gonzalez, also known as Vex; Zakiyyah Houlker, also known as Z; Bruck Jackson, also known as Finesse and Ness; Jerome Jackson, also known as Rome; Duane Kirby, also known as Montana, Tana, Ace and Eddie; Luis Lima, also known as Ghost; Joshua Martin, also known as Jizzy; Daniel Mischiyev, also known as Russia; Kenneth Ortiz, also known as Kenny and KO; Jacqueline Ricci, also known as Jackie; Jorge Serrano, also known as Bahno; Jeffrey Spangenburg, also known as Spongebob and Spongy; Claudis Wilson, also known as Dip; Michael Wright. Wallkill Town Supervisor Daniel Depew the town police department worked closely with the other local agencies and the FBI to investigate the drug trafficking and make the arrests. Senator Charles Schumer said arrests like these “are proof positive that this task force is absolutely essential for public safety in Orange County, and that the people who serve on this team are true heroes who put the people they serve above their own well-being.”

Gangster 'Mad Dog' in savage beating of murder supergrass

 

A BRUTAL gangland thug was spared even more jail time after he admitted his role in a savage assault on a criminal who became a supergrass in a high profile murder trial. Crumlin gangster Ian 'Mad Dog' Maloney (25) repeatedly kicked Joey O'Brien in the head as he lay semi-conscious in Charlie's Restaurant, Dame Street, on January 4, 2009. sickening Maloney -- who was connected to 'Fat' Freddie Thompson's mob -- is currently serving a 12-year sentence for the €1.2m armed robbery of Paul Sheeran Jewellers in Dundrum Town Centre on September 3, 2008. Just four months after that robbery he subjected Joey O'Brien -- the State's 'star witness' in a murder trial last summer -- to a beating which a judge yesterday described as "sickening". Self-confessed Crumlin drug dealer O'Brien -- who is now in the witness protection programme -- gave the key testimony that helped secure the conviction of gangland killer Peter Kenny (30), from Rialto, for the savage murder of Johnny 'Champagne' Carroll in February, 2009. A source explained: "A lot of people want O'Brien dead -- there is a contract on his head. "Mad Dog hated him because he used to bully him when he was a young fella -- he was delighted to get a chance to batter him. "The beating that O'Brien got was very severe -- Maloney was calling him a rat as he danced on his head." Yesterday, Dublin Circuit Court heard O'Brien woke up the next morning in hospital with a broken jaw, smashed teeth and a broken eye socket. He was badly concussed and could not remember much about the attack. Pieter Le Vert, defending Maloney, submitted that his client has offered a full apology. He said Maloney's brother had died several years ago shortly after been released from garda custody and he blames the authorities for this. He said this led to his client starting to drink and use drugs before becoming involved in crime. Mr Le Vert said Maloney is now drug free and the recent birth of his son has "changed him entirely". Judge Nolan called it a "sickening assault" and said it appears Maloney inflicted most of the injuries. assault However, he said there is some hope he will reform and that he would not extend his prison term. He sentenced Maloney to four years to run alongside his current sentence. Mad Dog's friend, Jonathon Murray (22), was jailed for 18 months for his role in the assault. The court heard that Maloney has 73 previous convictions and Murray has 48, including four for drug dealing.

Robert 'Snoop' Christie, ex-Nine Trey gang leader, gets another 5 years in prison

 

Robert “Snoop” Christie, the alleged leader of a Trenton faction of the Bloods street gang, who already is in a state prison on unrelated charges, was sentenced Friday to an additional five years for unlawfully possessing a gun as a convicted felon. Christie, 25, of Trenton, a local leader of the Nine Trey Gangsters set of the Bloods, was sentenced by state Superior Court Judge Robert C. Billmeier in Trenton to an additional five years in prison without possibility of parole, to be served consecutively to an eight-year sentence he is currently serving for unrelated narcotics and weapons offenses. Christie pleaded guilty on June 20 to an accusation charging him with possession of a gun as a convicted felon.

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