Paradise Post

Feds: California man ran kidnapping scam from Mexican prison

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LOS ANGELES » A California man imprisoned in Mexico ran a “virtual kidnapping” scheme that duped dozens of Americans into paying ransoms to free family members who were never actually kidnapped, according to federal prosecutor­s.

Julio Manuel Reyes Zuniga, 48, appeared in a Los Angeles court on Thursday after being extradited this week from Mexico. He pleaded not guilty to 31 counts, including extortion, conspiracy to commit extortion, foreign communicat­ion of threats and conspiracy to launder money, the U. S. Attorney’s Office said.

Reyes Zuniga, a reputed member of the Rancho San Pedro street gang, ran the scheme from 2015 to 2018 while he was locked up for murder at the Santa Martha Acatitla Prison near Mexico City, prosecutor­s said. He finished his sentence earlier this year and was held for extraditio­n in the extortion case.

Reyes Zuniga and coconspira­tors used smuggled cellphones to call their victims and claim they had kidnapped a loved one and planned to harm the person unless a ransom was paid, according to the indictment. In reality, no kidnapping­s had taken place.

Reyes Zuniga and others would demand the ransom payments in the form of wire transfers, cash dropped at locations, or purchase of electronic­s such as iPads or iPhones, according to court papers.

Once the money was delivered, individual­s in Mexico delivered the proceeds to the imprisoned Reyes Zuniga in person, court papers said.

At least 30 victims in Southern California each paid thousands of dollars on average, prosecutor­s said.

If convicted of all charges, Reyes Zuniga could face 20 years in federal prison for each count in the indictment.

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