United States Attorney Laura E. Duffy
announced that today Armando Villareal Heredia, aka Gordo Villareal, was
successfully extradited from the Republic of Mexico to the United States to
face federal racketeering (RICO) and drug charges in the Southern District of
California. According to court documents, Villareal is the lead defendant in a
43-defendant racketeering prosecution against the Fernando Sanchez- Arellano
Organization (FSO) which has been ongoing in the Southern District of
California since July 2010. Villareal was arrested by Mexican law enforcement
officers on July 9, 2011 at the request of the United States. Since his arrest
in Mexico, Villareal has remained in custody pending extradition to the United
States. According to the indictment, Villareal was one of the top leaders of
this criminal organization, which evolved from the now-defunct Arellano-Felix
Organization and is headed by the nephew of Benjamin and Javier Arellano-Felix.
“Today’s extradition of Villareal, a
top-lieutenant in the FSO who answered directly to Fernando Sanchez Arellano,
highlights our continued successful efforts to work with the government of
Mexico to combat organized criminal activity along the southwest border,”
United States Attorney Duffy stated. To date, 38 defendants have entered guilty
pleas in the case. During those guilty pleas, the defendants admitted to
participating in a violent transnational racketeering enterprise controlled by
Fernando Sanchez- Arellano and to committing murders, kidnappings, robberies,
assaults, money laundering, and a wide range of drug trafficking offenses. Four
defendants are fugitives and the only other remaining in-custody defendant is
scheduled for trial on June 5, 2012.
The indictment in this case resulted
from a long-term investigation conducted by the multi-agency San Diego Cross
Border Violence Task Force (CBVTF). The CBVTF was formed to target those
individuals involved in organized crime-related violent activities affecting
both the United States and Mexico. Law enforcement personnel assigned to the
CBVTF made extensive use of court-authorized wiretaps and other sophisticated
investigative techniques to develop the significant evidence which led to the
charges in this case.
United States Attorney Duffy praised the
Mexican government for their assistance in the extradition of Villareal. She
also commended the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) for the
coordinated team effort in handling this investigation, Operation Luz Verde.
Agents and officers from the Federal Bureau of Investigation; San Diego Police
Department; Drug Enforcement Administration; San Diego Sheriff’s Office; Chula
Vista Police Department; U.S. Marshals Service; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives; San Diego District Attorney’s Office; and California
Department of Justice participated in this OCDETF investigation. The Criminal
Division’s Office of International Affairs provided significant assistance in
the extradition. The OCDETF program was created to consolidate and utilize all
law enforcement resources in this country’s battle against organized crime and
major drug trafficking organizations.
The defendant is expected to be in
federal court in San Diego tomorrow, May 24, 2012, at 10:30 a.m. before United
States Magistrate Judge Nita L. Stormes.
An indictment itself is not evidence
that the defendant committed the crimes charged. The defendant is presumed
innocent until the government meets its burden in court of proving guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt.
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