Three MS-13 Co-Defendants Previously Pleaded Guilty to the
Same Charge, Including Their Participation in the Murder
Baltimore, Maryland – Daniel Flores-Ventura, a/k/a Necio,
age 26, of Aspen Hill, Maryland, pleaded guilty on April 2, 2019, to conspiring
to participate in a racketeering enterprise known as La Mara Salvatrucha, or
MS-13, including participating in a murder.
Co-defendants Vilas Sail Argueta-Bermudez, a/k/a Happy, Little Happy,
and Enchilada, age 32; Michael Campos-Lemus, a/k/a Humilde, age 25, both of
Aspen Hill; and Wilians Ernesto Lovos-Ayala, a/k/a Tigre, age 26, of
Woodbridge, Virginia, previously pleaded guilty to the same charge.
The guilty pleas were announced by United States Attorney
for the District of Maryland Robert K. Hur; Acting Special Agent in Charge
Cardell T. Morant of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland
Security Investigations (HSI); Acting Special Agent in Charge Jennifer L. Moore
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Baltimore Field Office; Chief Edward
Hargis of the Frederick Police Department; and Chief Barry M. Barnard of Prince
William County, Virginia Police.
“The convictions of these four defendants, and our ongoing
work with our law enforcement partners to bring other gang members to justice, demonstrate
our unflagging commitment to remove MS-13 and its associated violence from our
communities,” said United States Attorney Hur.
“We simply will not tolerate the wanton violence that MS-13 promotes.”
MS-13 is a gang composed primarily of immigrants or
descendants of immigrants from El Salvador, with members operating in the State
of Maryland, including Montgomery County, Prince George’s County, and Frederick
County, and throughout the United States.
Branches or “cliques” of MS-13 often work together cooperatively to
engage in criminal activity and to assist one another in avoiding detection by
law enforcement. In Maryland and the
surrounding area, these cliques include Molinos Locos Salvatruchas (“Molinos”),
Uniones Locos Salvatruchas (“Uniones”), Parkview Locos Salvatrucha (“PVLS”),
Normandie Locos Salvatrucha (“NLS” or “Normandie”), Sailors Locos Salvatrucha
Westside (“SLSW” or “Sailors”), Langley Park Salvatrucha (“LPS”), Weedoms Locos
Salvatrucha (“Weedoms”), and Cabanas Locos Salvatruchas (“Cabanas”).
To protect the gang and to enhance its reputation, MS-13
members and associates are expected to use any means necessary to force respect
from those who show disrespect, including acts of intimidation and
violence. MS-13’s creed is based on one
of its mottos, “Mata, roba, viola, controla,” which translates to, “kill,
steal, rape, control.”
According to their plea agreements, from about 2015
Flores-Ventura, Lovos-Ayala, and Campos-Lemus were all members and associates
of the Uniones clique of MS-13.
Co-defendant Argueta-Bermudez was a member and associate of the Molinos
clique of MS-13. The defendants admitted
to participating in numerous acts in furtherance of the racketeering
conspiracy, including drug sales and murder.
As detailed in their plea agreements, the defendants
admitted that beginning in June or July 2015, Flores-Ventura, Argueta-Bermudez,
Campos-Lemus, and Lovos-Ayala conspired to murder Victim-1, whom they believed
to be a member of the rival 18th Street gang.
On July 16, 2015, the conspirators lured Victim-1 from Maryland to
Virginia, on the pretext that Victim-1 was going to participate in a “court,” a
disciplinary beating to be administered to another individual.
Flores-Ventura admitted that he drove Victim-1 from Silver Spring,
Maryland, to Woodbridge, Virginia, in order to kill Victim-1. Argueta-Bermudez and Campos-Lemus also drove
to Woodbridge, Virginia, to participate in the murder. Lovos-Ayala and the other MS-13 members and
associates met in a wooded location in Woodbridge, where Flores-Ventura struck
Victim-1 on the head. Lovos-Ayala,
Argueta-Bermudez, Campos-Lemus, and other members and associates of MS-13 then
struck and stabbed Victim-1 with machetes and knives until Victim-1 was dead.
The defendants admitted that the murder of Victim-1 served
to maintain or increase the status of MS-13 within the community and to
maintain or increase the status of the defendants and other MS-13 members who
participated in the murder.
The defendants all face a maximum sentence of life in
prison. Chief U.S. District Judge James
K. Bredar has scheduled sentencing for Campos-Lemus on July 24, 2019; for
Argueta-Bermudez on August 19, 2019; for Lovos-Ayala on August 20, 2019, and
for Flores-Ventura on August 27, 2019, all at 10:00 a.m.
United States Attorney Robert K. Hur commended HSI
Baltimore, the FBI, the Frederick Police Department, and the Prince William
County Police Department for their work in the investigation, and thanked
Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul B. Ebert for his office’s
assistance. Mr. Hur thanked Assistant
United States Attorneys Kenneth Clark, Catherine K. Dick, and Matthew
DellaBetta who are prosecuting this Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force
case.
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