LOS ANGELES
– Authorities have arrested 11 members and associates of the South Los
Angeles-based Florencia-13 (F13) street gang on federal racketeering, narcotics
and firearms charges. One of the indictments unsealed today alleges that
defendants linked to the gang trafficked methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine and
other drugs in their territory and attempted to smuggle narcotics into the
state prison system.
Those
arrested today are among 36 members and associates of the F13 gang named in six
federal grand jury indictments. One of the indictments alleges that the gang is
a criminal enterprise as defined by the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations (RICO) Act. Twenty-six members and associates of the gang
allegedly conspired to violate RICO and engaged in drug trafficking, illegal
gambling, attempted murder and assault. The RICO indictment also alleges that
the gang actively attempted to smuggle narcotics into the California state
prison and Los Angeles County jail systems, including attempting to mail two
shipments totaling 100 grams of heroin to an imprisoned Mexican Mafia member.
The lead
defendant in RICO indictment – Leonel Laredo, a.k.a. “Wizard,” 47, who is
currently incarcerated at a federal prison in Beaumont, Texas – allegedly
directed F13’s operations in the unincorporated Florence-Firestone neighborhood
of South Los Angeles, as well as parts of Lynwood, Maywood, Bell and other
nearby communities. Laredo, who is serving a sentence for prior racketeering
and drug convictions related to his F13 activities, is one of four members of
the Mexican Mafia prison gang who allegedly had leadership roles in the gang.
The indictment alleges that Laredo ran the street gang from prison with a goal
of enriching himself, family members and associates through extortionate
“taxes” taken from drug dealers and businesses in F13’s territory.
The RICO
indictment also alleges that F13 members were responsible for the shooting and
attempted murder of a rival gang member in South Los Angeles in December 2016.
In April 2017, one defendant, Samuel Flores Mejia, a.k.a. “Menace,” shot and
wounded a fellow F13 member to discipline him at one of the gang’s “casitas,”
or illegal gambling houses.
A second
indictment unsealed today alleges that five F13 members and associates, working
out of a South Los Angeles hookah lounge, participated in a scheme to
distribute methamphetamine. A third indictment charges two F13 members with
being felons in possession of a firearm and ammunition, namely an AK-47-type
rifle. The remaining three indictments charge three individual F13 members and
associates with distributing of methamphetamine.
Out of the
36 defendants named in the six indictments, 11 were arrested today, 16 were
already in custody, and authorities are searching for nine fugitives.
The
defendants taken into custody this morning are scheduled to make their initial
court appearance this afternoon in United States District Court.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
This case
was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Los Angeles
Police Department. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
provided substantial assistance. The Joint Regional Intelligence Center
provided support during the investigation.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Christopher C. Kendall of
the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force Section.
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