Merced Cambero Jr., 39, who used the gang moniker “Shadow,”
pleaded guilty in February to participating, along with other gang members, in
a conspiracy to use violence against African-Americans to interfere with their
right to live in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. Cambero also
admitted to participating in the 1999 racially-motivated murder of Kenneth
Wilson, an African-American man who was shot and killed in furtherance of that
conspiracy. The defendant was sentenced
by United States District Judge Percy Anderson, who in 2006 presided over the trial
of four co-defendants who were charged along with Cambero in the initial 2004
indictment and a superseding indictment that followed in 2005.
The superseding indictment alleged that Cambero and three of
the four co-defendants – Gilbert “Lucky” Saldana, Alejandro “Bird” Martinez,
and Fernando “Sneaky” Cazares – shot and killed Mr. Wilson because of his race
and because he was using the public streets in Los Angeles, and that they used
firearms during and in furtherance of that crime. These defendants were also charged, along
with a fourth co-defendant, Porfirio “Dreamer” Avila, with conspiring to use
violence to interfere with the federal housing rights of African Americans in
Highland Park, including another African-American man, Christopher Bowser, who
was shot and killed in 2000. Saldana, Martinez, Cazares, and Avila stood trial
in 2006, were convicted on all charges, and were sentenced to life in prison.
Although Cambero was charged in the same indictment, he was never arrested or
arraigned until he was captured in Mexico last year. He was then returned to the United States to
face the charges against him.
At the 2006 trial of the co-defendants, a jury heard
testimony from two Avenues gang members who participated in the murder of
Kenneth Wilson and implicated Cambero and three co-defendants. The gang-member
witnesses also testified about an agreement among Avenues gang members to try
to preserve the primarily-Latino make-up of Highland Park by engaging in
violence against African Americans. Their testimony was corroborated by
numerous African-American residents of the Highland Park neighborhood who
described acts of racially-motivated violence directed at them by the
defendants and their fellow gang members.
In court filings connected with Cambero’s guilty plea and
sentencing, Cambero confirmed the evidence from the earlier trial, admitted
that he and his fellow gang members were in a stolen van when they saw Wilson,
whom they did not know, and decided to kill him because of his race. Cambero admitted that he and two other gang
members then got out of the van and fired guns at Wilson, who was killed by a
single gunshot through the neck.
“This Justice Department will not tolerate any act of
violence motivated because of another’s race,” said Acting Assistant Attorney
General John Gore. “The defendant’s egregious actions were unlawful, and as
this sentencing demonstrates, will not go without punishment. The Civil Rights
Division will continue to vigorously prosecute those who commit violent acts of
hate.”
“This defendant was part of a reprehensible scheme that
targeted an entire class of people simply because of skin color,” said U.S.
Attorney Nick Hanna. “The Justice Department is committed to preserving and
protecting everyone’s civil rights – particularly when violent acts are used to
violate those rights. Mr. Cambero attempted to avoid prosecution for many
years, but we persisted to bring him to justice and send a message to the
entire community that this type of conduct will not be tolerated and will be
punished.”
After hearing from the mothers of two African-American men
killed by the gang, Judge Anderson on Monday accepted the guilty plea and
sentenced Cambero to 20 years in prison.
Among the considerations Judge Anderson cited as influencing his
sentence were the defendant’s acceptance of responsibility and the desire of
the victims and witnesses to be spared the trauma of another trial.
This case was investigated by the FBI’s Los Angeles Field
Office and was prosecuted by Deputy Chief Bobbi Bernstein of the Civil Rights
Division’s Criminal Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jennifer Chou and
Daniel O’Brien of the Central District of California.
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