Greenbelt, Maryland – U.S. District
Judge Roger W. Titus sentenced Silvia Martinez, a/k/a "Crazy," age
23, of Washington, D.C., to 293 months in prison, followed by five years of
supervised release for conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise
in connection with her activities as a member of the 18th Street gang.
The sentence was announced by United
States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein; Acting Special
Agent in Charge Marino F. Vidoli of the ATF - Baltimore Field Division; Chief
Mark P. Sroka of the Gaithersburg Police Department; Chief Mark A. Magaw of the
Prince George's County Police Department; Chief J. Thomas Manger of the
Montgomery County Police Department; Chief Cathy Lanier of the Metropolitan
Police Department; Chief Larry Brownlee of the Maryland National Capital Park
Police - Prince George's County Division; Montgomery County Sheriff Darren
Popkin; Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Montgomery County State's Attorney John McCarthy; and Prince
George's County State's Attorney Angela D. Alsobrooks.
According to her plea agreement, from
2007 through March 2010, Martinez, a native of El Salvador, was a member of the
18th Street gang. The gang originated in the Los Angeles, California area and
operates in Central America and across the United States, including Maryland.
The gang is divided into subsets called cliques, and operates according to
rules which the gang enforces by punishment for their violation, including beating
the violating gang member. For serious transgressions, the gang will
"green light" or order the murder of a gang member.
On January 18, 2009, Martinez and other
gang members, including Joel Ventura Quintanilla and Ysaud Flores, participated
in the kidnapping and murder of 15 year old Dennys Alfredo Guzman-Saenz, who
was thought to be a rival gang member. Ventura Quintanilla and another gang
member forced Guzman-Saenz into a car in Langley Park, Maryland, then took him
to Gaithersburg, Maryland, where Martinez and other gang members became
involved. Martinez and other gang members took Guzman-Saenz to a park in
Gaithersburg where he was stabbed and beaten by several gang members, including
Martinez, causing his death. Guzman-Saenz's body was found in a creek in the
park the next morning.
On February 8, 2009, Martinez and other
gang members were at a residence in Gaithersburg discussing the killing of
rival gang members. Martinez rode in a car with other gang members into the
District of Columbia in search of rival gang members. Ventura Quintanilla and
another gang member in the car were both armed with guns. After the car stopped
near a restaurant, Ventura Quintanilla and the other gang member approached two
men who were standing in front of the restaurant. Ventura Quintanilla shot two
men, killing one of the victims, Manuel Garcia-Fuentes, age 24.
Judge Titus previously sentenced gang
members Joel Ventura Quintanilla, aka "Clon," age 25, and Ysaud
Flores, a/k/a "Snyder," age 33, both of Germantown, Maryland, to life
in prison and 22 years in prison, respectively. Martinez, Ventura Quintanilla
and Flores were also convicted on related state charges in Montgomery County
Circuit Court, where Ventura Quintanilla was sentenced to life in prison, and
Flores was sentenced to life in prison, with all but 75 years suspended.
Martinez is awaiting sentencing in the state case.
A total of seven 18th Street gang
members, including Martinez, Ventura Quintanilla and Flores, have been
convicted in federal court on charges related to their gang activities and
sentenced to between 94 months and life in prison.
United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein
commended the members of ATF-led RAGE Task Force, including the Gaithersburg
Police Department, the Prince George's County Police Department, Montgomery
County Police Department, Montgomery County Sheriff's Office, and the Maryland
National Capital Park Police - Prince George's County Division, as well as the
Metropolitan Police Department, the FBI and the Montgomery County and Prince
George's County State's Attorneys' offices for their work in this investigation
and prosecution. Mr. Rosenstein thanked Assistant United States Attorneys
William Moomau and Jonathan Lenzner, who prosecuted the case.
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