Los Angeles Times

Senior MS-13 leader arrested at border, officials say

On the FBI’s most wanted list, Freddy Ivan Jandres-Parada rose from L.A. streets.

- By Richard Winton

A senior leader of the MS-13 street gang who was one of the FBI’s most wanted gang fugitives was quietly arrested earlier this month at the California­Court

Mexico border on narcoterro­rism charges, authoritie­s said.

Freddy Ivan JandresPar­ada, 48, also known as Lucky De Park View, was taken into custody on March 7 by federal authoritie­s at the San Ysidro Port of Entry in San Diego County, sources told The Times. Federal officials did not disclose any details about the arrest.

Jandres-Parada’s apprehensi­on, first reported by

Watch, comes more than three years after his indictment in December 2020 on terrorism offenses relating to the direction of MS-13’s criminal activities in the U.S., El Salvador, Honduras and Mexico for nearly two decades, according to federal court documents.

He is a member of MS-13’s leadership council, initially known as the Twelve Apostles of the Devil and later renamed Ranfla Nacional, which controls thousands of

MS-13 members worldwide, authoritie­s said.

He and 13 other MS-13 leaders were indicted in the Eastern District of New York for their roles in dozens of killings, various other acts of violence, intimidati­on and material support of terrorists in El Salvador and throughout the United States, according to federal court documents.

The Ranfla Nacional “controlled the process for recruitmen­t of new members and advancemen­t to higher ranks.” It also issues “‘green lights’ to execute police officers, rivals, disloyal gang members or anyone it considers a snitch,” according to the indictment.

MS-13 killings often are carried out with machetes, the gang’s weapon of choice, in order to send intimidati­ng messages to enemies and those deemed to be disloyal.

Jandres-Parada’s rise in leadership mirrors the rise

of MS-13, also known as La Mara Salvatruch­a. Born in Jiquilisco, El Salvador, he became part of MS-13 as it evolved from a street gang in the Westlake area near downtown Los Angeles in the 1980s. He was convicted in 1994 of traffickin­g narcotics in L.A. County and sent to state prison for three years, according to court documents.

In L.A., more than a dozen MS-13 cliques are based in historical­ly immigrant neighborho­ods such as Westlake, Koreatown, PicoUnion and Hollywood, authoritie­s said.

Soon after he was released from state prison, Jandres-Parada was arrested again, for possession of a firearm, and sentenced to three years in prison, authoritie­s said. Like many in MS-13, he was sent back to El Salvador, where the gang grew into a massive force with political power.

As MS-13 gang members were returned to Central America, their numbers expanded across that region, even taking control of local prisons. Some of those who immigrated to the U.S. set up new cliques, from Virginia to Tennessee to Nevada, according to the court documents. The gang structure is fueled by cash from drug traffickin­g, extortion and kidnapping­s, prosecutor­s said.

When Jandres-Parada returned to the U.S., he was apprehende­d again and served time for illegal reentry before being deported again to El Salvador. There, authoritie­s say, he continued to run MS-13’s extensive transnatio­nal operations.

Under the gang’s power structure, bottom-rung cliques operate in regional tiers and zones, whose leaders report to street and prison bosses, who then report to the Ranfla Nacional. According to the indictment, more than 200 cliques exist in the U.S., El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, and the gang has even expanded into Mexico, working with various drug cartels.

In New York, JandresPar­ada faces charges of conspiracy to provide and conceal material support and resources to terrorists, conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism transcendi­ng national boundaries and conspiracy to finance terrorism.

According to the indictment, the MS-13 hierarchy carries political influence across Central America and for a time even reached a truce with El Salvador’s political leaders. By 2016, the gang was conducting militarize­d training operations for its members that included the use of improvised explosive devices, according to authoritie­s.

Jandres-Parada is not the only MS-13 leader who has been caught in recent months. In November, Elmer Canales-Rivera, also known as Crook de Hollywood, was arrested at George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston.

“We allege that Elmer Canales-Rivera, a founding member of MS-13’s ‘Twelve Apostles of the Devil,’ bears responsibi­lity for the gang’s efforts over decades to terrorize communitie­s, target law enforcemen­t, and sow violence here in the United States and abroad,” U.S. Atty. Gen. Merrick B. Garland said in a statement after his arrest.

Nearly all MS-13 inmates in federal custody are being held for their own protection at a single penitentia­ry in Lewisburg, Pa., according to sources who were not authorized to discuss prison security arrangemen­ts and requested anonymity.

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