Las Vegas Review-Journal

GOLDEN KNIGHTS MS-13 band caught

Metro pieces together pattern in 10 murders, leading to five arrests

- By Rio Lacanlale Las Vegas Review-journal

Five members of the MS13 gang were arrested in connection with a string of killings that left 10 people dead in Clark County in the past year, Las Vegas police announced Monday.

News of the arrests brought relief to Terry Towery, whose grandson Izaak Paul Towery, 23, was one of the 10 killed since March 2017.

“Now me and my wife can finally sleep at night,” the 63-year-old Michigan man told the Las Vegas Review-journal on Monday.

His grandson left a friend’s house Feb. 9 to walk home and was never seen alive again.

It would be weeks before his body was found by a hiker near Mount Charleston on Kyle Canyon Road. Like several others, Izaak Towery was dumped in a remote area and had injuries that indicated a violent death. At least six of them were kidnapped before they were killed, police said.

Towery died of multiple sharp force wounds, according to the Clark County coroner.

On Saturday, Cindy Towery told the Review-journal that she had spent the weeks since her grandson’s death questionin­g whether she would ever find out who killed him.

“We are anxious to hear of

MS-13 N. a d B l vd. Nellis

E . L a k e M e

Blvd. appeared to have been stabbed to death.

Feb. 2, 2018: Juan Carlos Raya, 34, is gunned down as he walks in the 4200 block of El Parque Drive, near Arville Street.

Feb. 6, 2018: Jose Hernandez, 50, and Ricardo

Olivas, 46, are shot to death and another is wounded in a neighborho­od near Charleston and Pecos Road.

Feb. 25, 2018: A hiker finds 23-year-old Izaak Paul Towery’s body near Kyle Canyon Road. Investigat­ors believe he had been stabbed to death about a month earlier.

March 2, 2018: Earl Ryan, 26, is found stabbed to death in an area near Hilltop Campground at Mount Charleston.

March 9, 2018:

an arrest,” she said.

Her answer came two days later. Towery’s suspected killers are being held on immigratio­n-related charges. The case has been turned over to the U.S. attorney’s office, and other charges recommende­d by police include kidnapping, assault with the intent to commit murder and first-degree murder.

MS-13 has ties to Central American countries and the California prison system. Lt. John Leon of Metro’s gang unit said it isn’t unusual for MS-13 members to be in Clark County, because “transnatio­nal gangs go from city to city.”

One of the five suspects in federal custody is a juvenile, police said at Monday’s news conference. Three are from El Salvador, and one is from Honduras. Metro did not release their names.

Metro originally identified eight suspects, but three were cleared and have provided “vital informatio­n” to the investigat­ion, Sheriff Joe Lombardo said.

Under the radar

For nine months, MS-13 operated quietly under Metro’s radar, killing two in 2017, police said.

The case was opened after detectives linked two January homicides that happened “in close proximity with many similariti­es,” homicide Capt. Robert Plummer said.

On Jan. 18, officers with Metro’s search and rescue team were looking for hikers on Frenchman Mountain. They instead found 21-year-old Carlos Anton Pashaca-rodriguez, a former member of MS-13. He died of multiple gunshot wounds to his head and multiple stab wounds.

Arquimidez Sandoval-martinez, who knew Pashaca-rodriguez, was interviewe­d by homicide detectives in connection with his death. A few days later, police said, Sandoval-martinez went missing.

Two weeks later, on Feb. 1, his body turned up in a desert area east of Las Vegas, near Lake Mead Boulevard and Pabco Road. The circumstan­ces of his death mirrored Pashaca-rodriguez’s.

“I do want the public to know that this investigat­ion has been a priority for this agency for the last several months as we made connection­s between the victims and their killers,” Lombardo said.

Forensic evidence helps case

“Sometimes a weapon isn’t used again for a long period of time, so the connection might not be as obvious,” Metro spokeswoma­n Carla Alston said.

In Metro’s case, MS-13 didn’t reuse the same weapon from the 2017 homicides until Earl Ryan, 26, and Rony Pashaca-fuentes, 18, were killed. Their bodies were found this month dumped at Mount Charleston.

Forensic evidence collected during the investigat­ion of their disappeara­nces showed that the gun used in the killings was related to the gang and the 2017 cases, Plummer said.

Detectives arrested the five suspects while they were driving on Jones Boulevard on March 2.

“Our homicide detectives later learned that when the suspects were stopped, they were on their way to commit another murder,” Plummer said.

During the investigat­ion’s warranted searches, Plummer said, police found an AR-15, semiautoma­tic pistols and shotguns.

All but one of the 18 recovered weapons were stolen in Metro’s jurisdicti­on, police said. The other was stolen in Henderson.

MS-13 in Clark County

There are fewer than 50 documented members of MS-13 in Clark County, said Leon, the gang unit lieutenant.

Metro’s gang unit will continue to support the homicide team and investigat­ions into MS-13, Leon said.

“The suspects involved in these crimes are extremely violent and killed their victims over as little as identifyin­g with another gang or participat­ing in street-level narcotics sales,” Lombardo said.

On Monday, police were confident that the case is closed, all victims have been identified and all the “suspects involved have been located and arrested,” Lombardo said.

Between January and March, Metro worked with the FBI, the U.S. attorney’s office and law enforcemen­t agencies in Los Angeles and Fresno, California, to build their case against the gang members.

“This has required immense dedication and hard work by our homicide detail and our gang unit,” Lombardo said.

“They were able to piece together a case in three months, which is a short period of time with an investigat­ion of this magnitude.”

A kind heart with a sense of humor

Terry Towery said he spent a lot of summers taking care of his grandson.

As a kid, Izaak Towery loved fishing and playing pranks. He had a great sense of humor, and he was a flirt, his grandfathe­r said.

“He had long blond hair and blue eyes, and he knew how to bat those eyes,” his grandfathe­r said Monday, laughing. “Even waitresses loved him when I would take him to restaurant­s.”

At that memory, Terry Towery laughed a little harder before letting out a long sigh.

“I’m just glad the case is closed,” he said.

Contact Rio Lacanlale at rlacanlale@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0381. Follow @riolacanla­le on Twitter.

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