Chicago Sun-Times

CeaseFire worker gets 2 years for firearm possession

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

Aworker for the Chicago anti- violence group CeaseFire was sentenced Wednesday to 27 months in prison after pleading guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Francisco “Smokey” Sanchez, a 51- year- old “violence interrupte­r” whom federal prosecutor­s claimed was a national leader of the Two-Six Nation street gang, told investigat­ors he obtained the gun for protection after “his own people” had opened fire on him last spring.

“Your work with CeaseFire is commendabl­e, but it baffles me that you decided that the way to deal with the violence directed at you was to obtain a gun,” U. S. District Judge John Z. Lee said while handing down the sentence.

“Of all people, Mr. Sanchez should know that violence begets violence,” Lee said.

Prosecutor­s had sought four years for Sanchez, citing wiretapped conversati­ons between Sanchez and Two- Six members that they said showed “that he retained decision- making authority in the gang.”

In one conversati­on, Sanchez was quoted as saying: “N—- you shoot at us we shoot at you.”

“These are not the words of a person who claims to be stopping violence in the City of Chicago or trying to convince others to walk away from criminal gang activity,” prosecutor­s wrote in amemo.

Lee ruled that the wiretaps didn’t prove Sanchez was a gang leader.

Sanchez, who showed no reaction in court on Tuesday, will get credit for the time served since his May 2017 arrest.

Gary Slutkin, CEO of Cure Violence — the University of Illinois at Chicago- based organizati­on that oversees CeaseFire — testified on Monday that, when he read the transcript­s of Sanchez’s secretly recorded conversati­ons, he “saw mediations.”

“Frank is extremely respectful,” Slutkin said. “He’s quiet. He does not use cuss words. This is the language that he speaks there with them.”

Slutkin also said supervisor­s on the Cure Violence staff were aware of the “mediations” as they were happening.

In a memo requesting Sanchez’s sentence be limited to time served, defense attorneys called him “an extraordin­ary person who turned his life around after his release from prison in 2008.”

Sanchez served 24 years in prison after being convicted of killing a rival gang member in 1986, defense attorneys wrote.

Sanchez is among about a dozen CeaseFire workers who have been charged with serious crimes while working for the organizati­on over the past decade.

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