Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Man gets 16 years in $2-million ransom that turned deadly

- By Gregory Yee

A Pasadena man was sentenced Friday to a lengthy federal prison term for his role in a 2018 kidnapping plot that turned fatal.

Anthony Valladares, 29, will spend 16 years and 3 months in prison, said the U.S. attorney’s office for the Central District of California.

At the hearing, U.S. District Judge Fernando M. Olguin said Valladares and his co-conspirato­rs committed a “horrendous crime” when they abducted the victim, eventually resulting in his death.

Valladares pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to kidnap in October 2020, prosecutor­s said.

Olguin ordered Valladares to pay $33,090 in restitutio­n, prosecutor­s said.

The kidnapping occurred on the evening of July 16, 2018. A friend dropped off Ruochen “Tony” Liao, a Chinese national who sold high-end cars in Southern California, at the San Gabriel Square shopping plaza on Valley Boulevard, according to court documents.

Liao believed he was meeting a man who would help him collect a debt, according to court documents.

The friend watched Liao, 28, climb into a dark-colored minivan, which drove off. It was the last anyone would see of Liao.

Prosecutor­s said Valladares conspired with 28year-old Guangyao Yang and 35-year-old Peicheng Shen to kidnap Liao.

Valladares was hired to intimidate, beat and subdue Liao during the kidnapping, prosecutor­s said, and he agreed to be paid in cash.

Shen used an alias to meet Liao several times under the pretense that he’d help him collect a debt from another person, according to court documents.

July 16 was their third meeting. Inside the waiting minivan that evening were Valladares and Alexis Ivan Romero Velez, a 25-year-old Azusa resident that Valladares recruited to act as the driver, according to court documents.

Once inside the minivan, Shen used a word to signal Valladares to start his attack, prosecutor­s said.

After he said the word, Valladares and Shen violently attacked Liao, using a stun gun to subdue him, prosecutor­s said. They ultimately bound and restrained him with a black hood and ties.

Valladares later admitted to helping Yang get the stun gun, revolver and bullets for the kidnapping, prosecutor­s said.

Romero drove the minivan to Rosemead when Liao was moved into a different car, prosecutor­s said.

Shen and Yang took Liao to a house in Corona where they bound his legs, taped his eyes shut, restrained his arms and shut him in a closet, prosecutor­s said.

The next day, Liao’s father received a $2-million demand, prosecutor­s said. If the money were deposited into three Chinese bank accounts within three hours, the kidnappers said, they’d release Liao alive.

Liao died of injuries suffered during the kidnapping, prosecutor­s said.

His remains were found in the Mojave Desert late last year, prosecutor­s said.

Valladares was an “organizer of a violent kidnapping motivated solely by greed,” prosecutor­s said.

Yang and Shen were taken into custody in China, prosecutor­s said.

Chinese authoritie­s filed charges related to kidnapping.

Velez pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to kidnap in September 2019, prosecutor­s said. His sentencing hearing is scheduled for Nov. 10.

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