Antelope Valley Press

California Board OKs parole of ex-Mexican Mafia killer

- By DON THOMPSON Associated Press

SACRAMENTO — California parole officials have approved the release of a notorious former Mexican Mafia prison gang leader who has been cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t, for nearly 20 years.

Two consecutiv­e governors previously blocked parole for Rene “Boxer” Enriquez in part based on the argument that he is safer in prison than on the streets, where he may be targeted as a snitch by his old cronies.

“They can’t deny him parole based on, ‘He might be in danger.’ That’s kind of his risk to take,” his attorney, Laura Sheppard, said, Tuesday.

Authoritie­s have taken extraordin­ary steps to protect him over the years, once booking him into custody under a false name on a bogus charge of possessing a swordfish without a license.

In 2015, the Los Angeles Police Department used SWAT officers and a police helicopter to secure a downtown building so Enriquez could speak to a group of police chiefs and business leaders about the gang’s growth and operations. Just last week, prison officials refused to provide his current photograph, citing security concerns.

“With his knowledge of the mafia, it’s his belief that if he stays out of their way ... that he’ll be fine,” Sheppard said. “He doesn’t believe they’re going to chase him down like you see in the movies, hunt him throughout the world.”

Yet Enriquez plans to keep cooperatin­g with federal authoritie­s as they are again prosecutin­g the leadership of the prison-based gang that began in the 1950s in a juvenile jail and has since grown into an internatio­nal criminal organizati­on.

“It’s how he makes amends,” Sheppard said. “He’s probably prevented more crimes than he was ever involved in.”

He has been in prison, since 1993, serving a life sentence for two second-degree murders, multiple assaults and drug

traffickin­g conspiracy.

Enriquez joined the Mexican Mafia — nicknamed the Black Hand or “La Eme,” its Spanish language initial — in 1985, while serving an earlier prison stint for rape and armed robbery, according to parole records. He spent nearly the next two decades building a reputation within the gang through murder, drug-running and terror, both in and out of prison.

Gov. Gavin Newsom turned over the final decision on the fate of Enriquez, now age 60, to a hearing by a 12-member panel of the 21-member parole Board.

He cited in part the “unique security threats.” Enriquez has revealed “the inner workings of large-scale gang associatio­ns, and informed on individual gang members. He testified for the prosecutio­n in numerous cases,” Newsom wrote.

Officials including a retired assistant director for the California prison system told the parole panel during a hearing, Monday, that Enriquez is a changed man who will continue contributi­ng to law enforcemen­t’s battle against the gang.

“I’ve seen the worst of the worst and I know that he has definitely changed his world,” said retired San Diego Police detective and gang expert Felix Aguirre.

But relatives and friends of Cynthia Figueroa Gavaldon lined up to argue that he is still dangerous and they fear for their safety upon his release. She was a 27-year-old mother of two young children when Enriquez ordered her killed, on Christmas Eve, 1989.

Enriquez “has nothing to offer the community. All he ever has known and touched has died,” said her father, Raymond Figueroa, referring to Enriquez as a “monster.”

He had two gang associates, including Figueroa’s daughter, killed for violations such as stealing drugs and money. In the second case, he and an accomplice first forcibly overdosed their victim with heroin before driving him to a remote area where Enriquez fatally shot him.

He and another man also stabbed Mexican Mafia leader Salvador “Mon” Buenrostro 26 times with inmate-made weapons, in 1991, in an interview room in the Los Angeles County Jail, though Buenrostro survived.

Enriquez has said he quit the gang, in 2002, when he discovered its members were killing children and innocent relatives of gang members who fell into disfavor. He has said that he would have help from a witness protection program if he is released.

And over the years, Enriquez has had dozens of letters of support for his parole from the FBI, local law enforcemen­t officials, multiple state and federal prosecutor­s, and a deputy state attorney general.

Newsom previously blocked Enriquez’s parole twice, in 2019, and 2020, and then-Governor Jerry Brown blocked it three times, in 2015, 2016 and 2017.

“He personally molded and shaped the Mexican Mafia’s expectatio­ns of its members and expanded the gang’s reach outside the prison,” Brown wrote, in 2016. He said that included pioneering the gang’s control of a vast network of drug dealers and gang members outside the prison walls.

Newsom this time said he was leaving a decision to the parole Board because of its “unique procedural and appellate history” and “other unusually complex factors.” He asked parole officials to consider both Enriquez’s “particular­ly violent criminal history and his singular rehabilita­tive record.”

A Los Angeles County judge overturned Newsom’s 2020 parole reversal, in August, saying the governor hadn’t shown proof that Enriquez is still dangerous. The Second District Court of Appeal had blocked Enriquez’s release while it considers Newsom’s appeal.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP PHOTO ?? A correction­al officer works at one of the housing units at Pelican Bay State Prison near Crescent City, Calif. California officials approved the parole of Mexican Mafia prison gang leader, Rene Enriquez, Monday.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP PHOTO A correction­al officer works at one of the housing units at Pelican Bay State Prison near Crescent City, Calif. California officials approved the parole of Mexican Mafia prison gang leader, Rene Enriquez, Monday.

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