Los Angeles Times

Feds say Whittier man tied to cartel

He is charged with smuggling guns destined for drug trafficker­s in Mexico.

- By Matthew Ormseth

Federal authoritie­s charged a Whittier man with directing a conspiracy to ship weaponry and ammunition to members of the Jalisco New Generation cartel, a drug traffickin­g group that law enforcemen­t officials describe as one of the most powerful in Mexico.

Marco Antonio Santillan Valencia, 51, was charged with conspiring to evade restrictio­ns on the export of firearms, conspiring to launder money and possessing ammunition as a felon.

Santillan and his codefendan­ts, including his son Marco Santillan Jr., 29, are accused of buying guns, ammunition and firearm components in Nevada, Oregon, Nebraska and Arizona and arranging to smuggle them into Mexico. The weaponry was purchased with the proceeds of drug sales, prosecutor­s charged.

An indictment, returned in December and unsealed last week, offers a sense of the alleged operation’s scope: Stopped by law enforcemen­t in San Bernardino County, Santillan Jr. and two others were found to be transporti­ng 64,400 rounds of ammunition, 20 50-round ammunition belts, rifle scopes, $52,471 in cash and $10,000 in money orders, the document said.

According to the indictment, authoritie­s seized guns and ammunition at various sites across the state: four rifles at a home in Midway City in Orange County, 77,300 rounds of ammunition in a trailer in Westlake Village, boxes of rifle components and bullets in a minivan in Whittier, and two rifles at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry, where an Orange County man tried to smuggle the weapons, ammunition and cash into Mexico.

Santillan and all but one of his codefendan­ts were arrested last week. Rafael Magallon Castillo, who was charged with conspiring to violate export restrictio­ns, is a fugitive and believed to be in Mexico, according to a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles. Magallon, 34, was last living in Oceano, just south of San Luis Obispo.

Santillan has pleaded not guilty. He was previously convicted in federal court in San Diego of conspiring to import contraband in 1994 and sentenced to six months in prison, court records show. His attorney didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment.

The guns and ammunition were said by law enforcemen­t officials to be bound for members of the Jalisco New Generation cartel, known by its Spanish initials, CJNG. Prosecutor­s cited a Facebook message in which Santillan Jr. allegedly said that “Mencho’s cartel” was “buying everything.”

Authoritie­s say CJNG is led by Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho.” A 55-year-old former policeman, Oseguera is the subject of a $10-million bounty offered by the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion. In its 2021 threat assessment, the DEA warned that CJNG was one of Mexico’s two dominant drug traffickin­g groups, along with the Sinaloa cartel.

CJNG in particular has pushed synthetic drugs — chiefly methamphet­amine and fentanyl — into the U.S. through the border cities of Tijuana, Juarez and Nuevo Laredo, agency officials wrote in the assessment. Most of the methamphet­amine and fentanyl sold in Los Angeles is supplied by the group, the assessment says.

Authoritie­s in L.A. warned two years ago that Oseguera’s organizati­on was using drug proceeds to buy weapons in the U.S., then smuggling the guns and ammunition to Mexico.

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