Albuquerque Journal

Former gang members help break grip of massive SNM

Affidavit says dozens secretly working with law enforcemen­t leading to 114 arrests

- BY COLLEEN HEILD JOURNAL INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTER

Loyalty is prized within the notorious Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang. But it only goes so far, as revealed in a new criminal complaint filed in the massive New Mexico federal racketeeri­ng prosecutio­n.

More than 30 former members and leaders of SNM have been secretly cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t to help break the decades-old grip of the alleged murderous New Mexico prison gang, according to an FBI arrest warrant affidavit filed Aug. 31.

More than 20 members inside the gang are described as “confidenti­al human sources,” according to the affidavit written by FBI Special Agent Bryan Acee, the lead investigat­or in the case.

The affidavit relates to the arrest of Lupe Urquizo, aka “Marijuano,” who is accused of assaulting inmates, correction­al officers, committing arson, and acting as a messenger within the prison system to help communicat­e planned hits on other inmates. He is the latest suspect charged. Over the past two years, about 114 suspected members and associates of the gang have been arrested. More than 80 have been charged with federal crimes, Acee’s affidavit states.

The majority of those have pleaded guilty,

the affidavit stated. Court records show that less than 15 defendants are awaiting trial, which has been delayed until next July.

The prosecutio­n contends that SNM is a violent and powerful racketeeri­ng enterprise that extends beyond prison walls.

But at least one defense attorney has claimed that some people have been threatened by law enforcemen­t agents with “inclusion” in the racketeeri­ng prosecutio­n if they didn’t agree to cooperate and give statements.

“There is a great risk that these coercive police tactics will produce involuntar­y statements,” stated a motion filed in February by attorney Amy Sirignano, who represents defendant Christophe­r Garcia.

Garcia, in April, lamented that FBI agents came to his jail cell in Santa Fe to obtain a court-approved DNA sample.

“You make it look like people are talking to you,” Garcia told the agents. “You know, divide and conquer.” His conversati­on was revealed in a transcript filed in the criminal case.

The SNM gang has roots dating back to the 1980 deadly riot at the state Penitentia­ry in Santa Fe. It grew to about 500 members over the years.

Release from prison didn’t necessaril­y end a gang member’s affiliatio­n, Acee’s recent affidavit stated.

“When SNM Gang members or associates completed their sentences and rejoined their communitie­s, they were expected to remain loyal to the SNM Gang and work to further the goals of the ... gang outside the prison environmen­t,” he wrote.

“Those who failed to show continued loyalty to the gang were discipline­d in various ways, to include murder and assault. One of the significan­t goals of the gang was to control and profit from narcotics traffickin­g,” Acee’s affidavit added.

The FBI-led investigat­ion began in early 2015 after the FBI received word that SNM leaders planned to kill then-state Correction­s Secretary Gregg Marcantel and another top correction­s official. Investigat­ors learned later that year that incarcerat­ed leaders “directed members on the street to acquire firearms and kill the NMCD officials,” the affidavit stated.

The plot was ultimately foiled with the first of three waves of federal grand jury indictment­s against SNM members and associates.

In Urquizo’s case, he is alleged to have discussed killing another gang member believed to have cooperated with law enforcemen­t during an investigat­ion. Under SNM protocol, “paperwork” must be produced detailing the reasons or proof of wrongdoing before a “hit” can occur.

Urquizo maintained the paperwork for the hit and agreed to take it to other members at the Southern New Mexico Correction­al Facility in March 2014, the affidavit alleges.

Urquizo also allegedly discussed the fact that one of SNM’s gang leaders had failed to cover a security camera during the March 7, 2014, fatal stabbing of SNM member Javier Molina. That gang leader, identified as Daniel Sanchez, was also blamed for failing to dispose of the shank used in the stabbing. The “hit” on Sanchez was averted when correction­s officials transferre­d him to a prison out of state.

Urquizo was also alleged to have been found with a homemade tattoo machine in his prison cell. SNM members are known to identify themselves by their tattoos, Acee’s affidavit stated.

Meanwhile, court records show there has been at least one hitch as the parties prepare for trial. The U.S. Attorney’s Office provided the defendants with discovery materials via electronic tablets because of the thousands of documents generated in the investigat­ion.

But in April, U.S. District Judge James O. Browning ordered the tablets seized, at least temporaril­y, after a confidenti­al witness at the Sandoval County Detention Center told FBI agent Acee that the security controls on the tablets “can be bypassed and reset,” allowing defendants to wipe away the discovery material from the tablets and gain access to the Internet and camera functions of the tablets.

As proof, court records state, the confidenti­al witness sent Acee an email and a photo he had taken of himself in his jail cell.

 ?? SOURCE: NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S ?? This is one of the tattoos authoritie­s found on the torso of a member of the Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang.
SOURCE: NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S This is one of the tattoos authoritie­s found on the torso of a member of the Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang.
 ??  ?? Lupe Urquizo
Lupe Urquizo
 ?? MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL ?? Security was tight when members of the Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang were transporte­d to U.S. District Court in Albuquerqu­e for a pre-trial hearing in 2016.
MARLA BROSE/JOURNAL Security was tight when members of the Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang were transporte­d to U.S. District Court in Albuquerqu­e for a pre-trial hearing in 2016.

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