Thirteen individuals alleged to be members and associates of
MS-13 were arrested in Central Ohio and Indiana this morning. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, U.S. Attorney
Benjamin C. Glassman of the Southern District of Ohio, Special Agent in Charge
Angela L. Byers of the FBI, Detroit Field Office Director Rebecca Adducci of
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal
Operations, Sheriff Dallas Baldwin of Franklin County and Chief Kim Jacobs of
Columbus Police announced the indictment that was unsealed following the
arrests today.
Federal charges were
filed against a total of 15 alleged MS-13 members. Ten were charged by a federal grand jury with
conspiracy to commit extortion, conspiracy to commit money laundering and use
of a firearm during a crime of violence in an indictment returned on July
27. Five others were charged in criminal
complaints with reentering the U.S. after deportation. Two of the 15 remain fugitives.
“With more than 10,000 members across 40 states, MS-13 is
one of the most dangerous criminal organizations in the United States
today," said Attorney General Sessions. "MS-13 members have killed
children and pregnant women, extorted immigrant-owned businesses, and
trafficked underage girls to sell them for sex. President Trump has ordered the
Department of Justice to reduce crime and take down transnational criminal
organizations, and we will be relentless in our pursuit of these objectives.
Today's charges are our next step toward making this country safer by taking
MS-13 off of our streets for good.”
MS-13, formally La Mara Salvatrucha, is a multi-national
criminal organization composed primarily of immigrants or descendants of
immigrants from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. The organization’s leadership is based in El
Salvador, where many of the gang’s high-ranking members are imprisoned.
In 2012, the U.S. government designated MS-13 as a
“transnational criminal organization.”
It is the first and only street gang to receive that designation. MS-13
has become one of the largest and most violent criminal organizations in the
U.S., with more than 10,000 members and associates operating in at least 40
states, including Ohio. In Ohio and elsewhere in the U.S., MS-13 is organized
into “cliques,” which are smaller groups of MS-13 members and associates acting
under the larger mantle of the organization and operating in a specific region,
city or part of a city.
The indictment alleges that 10 defendants – members and
associates of the Columbus clique of MS-13 – conspired to commit extortion
through the use of threatened or actual force, violence or fear to intimidate
their victims into paying money to the defendants and their co-conspirators.
Many of the proceeds were sent, usually by wire transfer and often through
intermediaries, to MS-13 members and associates in El Salvador and elsewhere.
The money was then used to promote and facilitate the criminal activities of
MS-13 in El Salvador and the U.S.
As part of the alleged conspiracy, the defendants and their
co-conspirators unlawfully obtained extortion proceeds to be used to, among
other things, buy items that MS-13 uses to engage in criminal activity, such as
cellular phones, narcotics and weapons; provide financial support and
information to MS-13 members, including those incarcerated in El Salvador and
the U.S., as well as those who have been deported; and aid families of deceased
MS-13 members.
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