53 arrested in El Salvador, 214 arrested across the United
States
U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) officials today announced the results of stepped up efforts by
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the department to target and
dismantle MS-13 – culminating in the arrest of 267 in the United States and
overseas.
“Operation Raging Bull” was led by ICE’s Homeland Security
Investigations (HSI) with support from federal, state, local and international
law enforcement partners, and was conducted in support of the Department of
Justice’s renewed prioritization of the violent transnational gang.
“With more than 10,000 members across 40 states, MS-13 is
one of the most dangerous criminal organizations in the United States today,”
said Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “President Trump has ordered the
Department of Justice to reduce crime and take down transnational criminal
organizations, and we will be relentless in our pursuit of these objectives.
That’s why I have ordered our drug trafficking task forces to use every law
available to arrest, prosecute, convict, and defund MS-13. And we are getting
results. So far this year, we have secured convictions against more than 1,200
gang members and worked with our partners in Central America to arrest and
charge some 4,000 MS-13 members. I want
to thank the Department of Homeland Security, our federal law enforcement
agents and prosecutors from the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal
Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section as well as Treasury, BOP, DOJ’s
OCDETF task force members, and all of our state and local law enforcement
partners for their hard work. These 267 arrests are the next step toward making
this country safer by taking MS-13 off of our streets for good.”
“MS-13 has long been a priority for ICE. However we are now
combating the gang with renewed focus and an unprecedented level of cooperation
among DHS’s components and our domestic and international partners,” said
Thomas Homan, ICE Deputy Director and Senior Official Performing the Duties of
the Director. “ICE has the ability to pursue complex criminal cases using our
statutory authorities and to prevent crime by using our administrative arrest
authorities to remove gang members from the country. We will not rest until
every member, associate, and leader of MS-13 has been held accountable for
their crimes, and those in this country illegally have been removed.”
The operation was conducted in two phases, targeting
dangerous gang members and their global financial networks. The first phase of
the operation which was announced previously, netted 53 arrests in El Salvador
at the conclusion of an 18-month investigation in September. The second phase
was conducted across the United States from Oct. 8 to Nov. 11, and concluded
with 214 MS-13 arrests nationwide.
HSI received significant operational support, including
intelligence sharing and collaboration, from ICE’s Enforcement and Removal
Operations (ERO), U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), U.S. Border Patrol,
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the U.S. Department of
Treasury, U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Prisons (BOP), as well as
state, local, federal, and international law enforcement partners. The Organized Crime and Gang Section of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, with funding from the Organized Crime
Drug Enforcement Task Forces, along with the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices in the
Districts of Arizona, Maryland, Massachusetts, Northern District of California,
Southern District of Iowa and Southern District of Texas, and are prosecuting
the cases.
"Securing the homeland is a critical piece of the USCIS
mission,” said USCIS Director L. Francis Cissna. “We are committed to
supporting and providing intelligence to our law enforcement colleagues on
public safety initiatives like Operation Raging Bull. We will bring all of our
agency’s resources to bear in helping protect the American public from violent
crime, and in the pursuit of those who seek to endanger the security of our
nation.”
"This joint effort is not new. It is something we all
do as law enforcement,” said Border Patrol Deputy Chief Scott Luck. “I look
forward to continue working with my partners here at Headquarters as well as
the field to address not just this threat but all threats.”
“The Bureau of Prisons is proud to have supported our local,
state, and federal law enforcement partners in this successful effort to
enhance public safety,” said Assistant Director Frank Lara for the Federal
Bureau of Prisons Correctional Programs. “The Bureau of Prisons will continue
to work collaboratively to combat the threat violent gangs pose inside prisons
and in the community.”
Of the total 214 arrests made in the United States, 93 were
arrested on federal and/or state criminal charges including murder, aggravated
robbery, Racketeering Influenced Corrupt Organization (RICO) offenses, Violent
Crime in Aid of Racketeering (VICAR) offenses, narcotics trafficking, narcotics
possession, firearms offenses, domestic violence, assault, forgery, DUI and
illegal entry/reentry. The remaining 121 were arrested on administrative
immigration violations.
Sixteen of the 214 arrested were U.S. citizens and 198 were
foreign nationals, of which only five had legal status to be in the United
States. Foreign nationals arrested were from El Salvador (135), Honduras (29),
Mexico (17), Guatemala (12), Ecuador (4) and Costa Rica (1).
Sixty-four individuals had illegally crossed the border as
unaccompanied alien children; most are now adults.
Examples of the federal prosecutions during this operation
include:
In Baltimore,
Maryland, the arrest and indictment of four MS-13 members on charges that include
violent crimes in aid of racketeering and conspiracy to commit murder in aid of
racketeering;
In Greenbelt,
Maryland, the arrest and indictment of eight MS-13 members on charges that
include conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise, conspiracy to
distribute and possession with intent to distribute controlled substances and
conspiracy to interfere with interstate commerce by extortion; and
MS-13 members and
associates were arrested in East Boston and Chelsea, Massachusetts; Falfurrias,
Hidalgo and Laredo, Texas; Nogales, Tucson and Yuma, Arizona; Council Bluffs,
Iowa; Annapolis, Baltimore, Clinton, Beltsville, Upper Marlboro, Centreville
and Jessup, Maryland; and San Jose, California and charged with various federal
offenses including illegal alien in possession of a firearm and illegal
re-entry after deportation.
Following this operation, ICE has added six MS-13 fugitives
to its list of “most wanted” individuals, including one fugitive wanted for
homicide in Montgomery County, Texas, and five others wanted for their
involvement in the homicide and attempted homicides of El Salvadoran police
officers. All are suspected of being somewhere in the U.S.
Individuals are confirmed as gang members if they admit
membership in a gang; have been convicted of violating Title 18 USC 521 or any
other federal or state law criminalizing or imposing civil consequences for
gang-related activity; or if they meet certain other criteria such as having
tattoos identifying a specific gang or being identified as a gang member by a
reliable source.
Gang associates are individuals who exhibit gang member
criteria but who are not formally initiated into the gang. Law enforcement
officers encountering these individuals will determine whether indications of
gang association are present by referring to the gang membership criteria.
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