Montreal Gazette

Toronto man to be deported after ms-13 gang boast

Federal judge upholds decision of refugee board

- ADRIAN HUMPHREYS ahumphreys@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/AD_Humphreys

While he was in jail awaiting trial, René Pacheco was visited by a Canada border agent and, for whatever reason, bragged to him of his ties to MS-13, a notorious crime gang.

He showed the agent a tattoo of the number 13 on the back of his left hand. He gave a colourful account of enduring a 13-second beating as an initiation rite and how the 10 to 20 members his Toronto chapter, known as a clique, controlled territory in the Jane and Sheppard area of the city.

For the El Salvadoran man who has lived in Canada for 20 years, his braggadoci­o meant a move by the Canada Border Services Agency to deport him for membership in a criminal organizati­on.

At a hearing in front of the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board last year, Pacheco, 26, changed his story. He said the “13” tattoo was just his “lucky number” and any talk of gangs was fuelled by drugs and a compulsion to lie to make him seem more powerful.

A Federal Court of Canada judge rejected the new version of his life story last week, moving Pacheco closer to a return to El Salvador. He is a permanent resident of Canada but not a Canadian citizen, according to IRB records.

His trouble started when he was arrested in 2016 for several criminal charges, including attempted murder. While awaiting trial, a CBSA enforcemen­t officer interviewe­d him in jail, where he revealed the detailed gang account, according to court and IRB records.

Later, the serious criminal charges were dropped when the complainan­t said her allegation­s against him weren’t true. He pleaded guilty to minor offences and was sentenced to just one day in jail. His mouth, however, brought him bigger trouble.

At his immigratio­n hearing, the IRB heard from gang experts that Pacheco’s informatio­n on MS-13 was accurate, from the tattoo, the area of Toronto MS-13 activity and the initiation rite.

Pacheco, however, told a different account, disavowing any gang links. All he knew about MS-13, he said, he learned from YouTube and he complained he was high on drugs when talking to the CBSA and remembered nothing about it. He couldn’t explain why his Facebook page featured MS13 gang graffiti.

He was deemed inadmissib­le to Canada, a decision he appealed to the Federal Court.

Last week, Judge George R. Locke, said the IRB’s decision was reasonable based on the evidence, largely the jailhouse admission corroborat­ed by the tattoo, the Facebook photograph and his accurate knowledge of the gang.

Locke said a transcript of his interview with CBSA showed Pacheco to be “logical and straightfo­rward” and showed no sign of impairment.

The MS-13, also called Mara Salvatruch­a, became notorious on the streets and in law enforcemen­t for liberal use of brutal violence, including a fondness for machetes.

The gang became particular­ly famous recently when U.S. President Donald Trump started branding them as public enemy No. 1. Last month Trump called MS-13 members “animals” at an immigratio­n roundtable. Afterward, the White House released a fact sheet titled, “What you need to know about the violent animals of MS-13.”

In other speeches Trump called MS-13 members “stone cold killers, vicious killers” and highlighte­d MS13 victims in his State of the Union address.

The MS-13 was started in the 1980s by Salvadoran immigrants in Los Angeles and has had a presence in Toronto for at least 10 years. In the United States and Central America, the gang has a wide and troubling presence associated with brutal violence, drug traffickin­g, murder, prostituti­on, robbery and a litany of other crimes.

Officials estimate approximat­ely 10,000 MS-13 members in the United States and 50,000 throughout Central America. The U.S. Treasury Department lists MS-13 as a transnatio­nal criminal organizati­on.

 ?? ELMER MARTINEZ / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Four unidentifi­ed members of the MS-13 gang show their tattoos inside the National Penitentia­ry near Tegucigalp­a, Honduras. The gang is notorious in the United States and Central America for its violent crimes.
ELMER MARTINEZ / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES Four unidentifi­ed members of the MS-13 gang show their tattoos inside the National Penitentia­ry near Tegucigalp­a, Honduras. The gang is notorious in the United States and Central America for its violent crimes.

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