Greenbelt, Maryland – U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis
sentenced Kevin Soriana-Hernandez, a/k/a “Brocha,” age 19, of Riverdale,
Maryland, today to 26 years in federal prison, followed by five years of
supervised release, for his participation in the racketeering enterprise known
as La Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, including a murder and attempted murder.
The sentence was announced by U.S. Attorney Robert K. Hur
for the District of Maryland, Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski
for the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Assistant Director in Charge
Nancy McNamara of the FBI Washington Field Office’s Safe Streets/HIDTA Task
Force, Acting Special Agent in Charge Cardell T. Morant of U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Baltimore
Field Office, Special Agent in Charge Jesse R. Fong of the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) Washington Field Division, Chief J. Thomas Manger of the
Montgomery County Police Department, Chief Henry P. Stawinski III of the Prince
George’s County Police Department, Chief Amal Awad of the Hyattsville Police
Department, Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy; and
Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy.
“This sentence sends a message that the violence perpetrated
by MS-13 members and associates will not be tolerated,” said United States
Attorney Robert K. Hur. “Our ongoing
work with our law enforcement partners to bring other gang members to justice,
demonstrates our unflagging commitment to eliminate MS-13 and its campaign of
wanton violence.”
“MS-13’s stock-in-trade is violence and intimidation, as
shown by the brutal and premeditated murder that Kevin Soriana-Hernandez and
his fellow MS-13 members committed in Riverdale on Sept. 16, 2017,” said
Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski.
“The Department of Justice will not rest in our mission to dismantle
MS-13 and put an end to the gang’s evil efforts to terrorize our streets.”
According to the plea agreement, MS-13 is a gang composed
primarily of immigrants or descendants of immigrants from El Salvador, with
members operating in the State of Maryland, including Montgomery County and
Prince George’s County, and throughout the United States. Branches or “cliques”
of MS-13 often work together cooperatively to engage in criminal activity and
to assist one another in avoiding detection by law enforcement. MS-13 members
and associates are required to commit acts of violence within the gang and
against rival gangs. One of the principal rules of MS-13 is that its members
must attack and kill rivals, known as “chavalas,” whenever possible.
As detailed in his plea agreement, Soriana-Hernandez
admitted that since at least September 2017, he was a member and associate of
the Sailors clique of MS-13, in Riverdale, Maryland. Beginning in approximately August 2017, members
of the Sailors clique, including Soriana-Hernandez, engaged in an ongoing and
escalating altercation with a group of individuals also residing in Riverdale,
whom they believed to be members of a rival gang. The two groups threatened each other with
physical violence, brandished firearms, and shot at each other.
Soriana-Hernandez also admitted that on September 16, 2017,
he and other MS-13 members and associates planned and conspired to murder
individuals in the rival group.
Specifically, Soriana-Hernandez admitted that on September 16, 2017, he
and four co-conspirators drove to the area in Riverdale where two of the
suspected gang rivals were located, and parked on a hill overlooking the
area. Soriana-Hernandez and two
co-conspirators covered their faces and proceeded down the hill toward the
location. At the time, one victim was
seated in a car and the other was near the car.
Soriana-Hernandez fired multiple shots at the car and at both victims,
but did not strike either victim. One
co-conspirator fired a single shot at the victim who was sitting in the car,
after which the firearm jammed. Another
co-conspirator then approached the vehicle and stabbed that victim multiple
times. The victim later died. According
to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, the victim died from a single
gunshot wound and 13 stab wounds.
Five of Soriana-Hernandez’s co-defendants remain charged in
the eighth superseding indictment with various racketeering violations,
including conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise, murder in aid
of racketeering, conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering, drug
trafficking conspiracy, and extortion conspiracy. The trial of the remaining defendants is
scheduled to begin on January 6, 2020.
Those defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt in a court of law.
U.S. Attorney Robert K. Hur and Assistant Attorney General
Brian A. Benczkowski commended the FBI Washington Field Office’s Safe
Streets/HIDTA Task Force, HSI Baltimore, the DEA Washington Field Office, the
Prince George’s County Police Department, the Montgomery County Police
Department, the Hyattsville Police Department, the Prince George’s County
State’s Attorney’s Office, and the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office
for their work in the investigation. The
WFO’s Safe Streets/HIDTA Task Force is composed of FBI Agents along with
Detectives from the Capital Region engaged in identifying, disrupting and
dismantling the most prolific gangs in the region to include MS-13.
Mr. Hur and Mr. Benczkowski thanked Assistant U.S. Attorneys
William D. Moomau and Catherine K. Dick and Trial Attorneys Francesca Liquori
and Julie Finocchiaro of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang
Section, who prosecuted this Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force case.
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