The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Feds outline prosecutio­n of MS-13 gang killings

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS » A long-running investigat­ion into an Ohio branch of the violent El Salvador-based MS-13 gang, including the solving of eight homicides, neared conclusion Thursday with the sentencing of the last defendant in custody, central Ohio’s top federal prosecutor announced.

Over the years, racketeeri­ng conspiracy charges against gang members have included murder, attempted murder, assault, drug traffickin­g, and money laundering. Among the victims were Wilson Villeda, a 17-year-old Columbus area high school student whose body was mutilated beyond recognitio­n by machete-wielding assailants, and Genesis Lizbeth Cornejo-Alvarado, a 15-year-old girl shot to death in Texas for dating a rival gang member.

The prosecutio­n of 23 members of the Columbus “clique” of MS-13 was the first federal case against the gang in the Midwest, said Vipal Patel, acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio.

Of those, 22 — including a 33-yearold gang member sentenced Thursday to more than three decades in prison — have been convicted. The last of the group is a fugitive in El Salvador.

“They brought terror to this community using machetes; we removed

The prosecutio­n of 23 members of the Columbus “clique” of MS-13 was the first federal case against the gang in the Midwest, said Vipal Patel, acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio.

them from this community using evidence, legal process, and the rule of law,” Patel said.

Gang leader Martin Neftali Aguilar-Rivera was sentenced to life in prison in 2019.

Federal prosecutor­s resolved the MS-13 cases fairly, said veteran Columbus defense attorney Diane Menashe, who represente­d Aguilar-Rivera and noted he took responsibi­lity for his actions.

The gang culture of MS-13 is far deadlier than U.S. gangs, with neither membership nor leaving the group an option, Menashe said Thursday.

“The trauma that they lived through that caused them to come here, literally, it’s nothing like I’d ever seen before,” Menashe said. “And nothing like gang culture within this country.”

That background does not excuse the defendants’ behavior, said Brian Martinez, an assistant U.S. attorney involved in the investigat­ion. Most people fleeing Central American poverty and violence who come to the U.S. don’t make the choices these individual­s did, he said.

“Nothing that ever happened to these individual­s excuses the conduct to which they admitted in this case,” Martinez said. “And it is particular­ly insulting for them to bring to this community the very violence from which they claim to be escaping.”

Across the country, federal authoritie­s have brought multiple charges against MS-13 members in recent years. On Wednesday, the acting U.S. Attorney in Nashville announced that nine MS-13 members face charges alleging their involvemen­t in killings, kidnapping­s, assaults, robberies and large-scale drug distributi­on in and around Nashville.

On July 20, an MS-13 member in Maryland was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for his role in the killing of a 16-year-old boy who was stabbed and cut more than 100 times before his body was set on fire.

Authoritie­s have also prosecuted MS-13 members for a series of killings on Long Island.

 ?? ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vipal Patel, acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, discusses the case brought against 23central Ohio members of the El Salvador-based MS-13 gang, on July 29, in Columbus. Patel said 22 of the gang members have now been convicted with the prosecutio­n resolving eight homicides. A 23rd gang member is a fugitive in El Salvador.
ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vipal Patel, acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, discusses the case brought against 23central Ohio members of the El Salvador-based MS-13 gang, on July 29, in Columbus. Patel said 22 of the gang members have now been convicted with the prosecutio­n resolving eight homicides. A 23rd gang member is a fugitive in El Salvador.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States