LOS ANGELES
– A member of the Pueblo Bishop Bloods street gang has been found guilty by a
jury for the second time of racketeering offenses that included the slaying of
a man in front of the victim’s 2-year-old son.
Rondale
Young, a.k.a. “Pueblo Grump,” 36, of South Los Angeles, was found guilty on
Tuesday after a two-week trial. United States District Judge S. James Otero has
scheduled an October 7 sentencing hearing, at which time Young is expected to
receive a sentence of life in federal prison.
The federal
jury convicted Young of conspiring to violate the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) in relation to the August 2, 2009 murder of
Francisco Cornelio, a 23-year-old man with no gang affiliation who was shot to
death at point-blank range while vacuuming his car and in front of his young son.
The jury also found Young guilty of conspiracy to commit a violent crime in aid
of racketeering (VICAR); VICAR murder; and possessing, using and discharging a
firearm resulting in death in relation to a crime of violence.
According to
the evidence presented at trial, on the day of Mr. Cornelio’s murder, Young,
accompanied by other armed gang members, drove his car into rival gang
territory, seeking retaliation for a fatal drive-by shooting of a Pueblo Bishop
gang member. Mr. Cornelio was targeted simply because he was of Hispanic
descent and was in rival gang territory. Local authorities originally charged
Young in 2009 with killing Mr. Cornelio, but he was acquitted by a state jury.
An August
2010 indictment charged Young and 44 other members and associates of the gang
with being members of a criminal enterprise that engaged in drug dealing,
firearms trafficking, murder, witness intimidation and armed robbery as part of
the gang’s efforts to control and terrorize the Pueblo Del Rio Housing Projects
in South Los Angeles.
In 2013,
Young was convicted of racketeering charges in connection to the indictment and
Mr. Cornelio’s murder and was sentenced to life in federal prison. That
conviction was vacated in 2017 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit, which cited evidentiary errors during the first trial. The case was
sent back to the district court for a retrial. Young has been in federal
custody since the 2010 indictment.
With Young’s
conviction, all 45 defendants charged in this matter have been convicted of
federal RICO and related charges, and have been held responsible for multiple
murders.
This matter
was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Los Angeles Police
Department; the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development,
Office of Inspector General; the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation; and the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Mack E. Jenkins, Chief of
the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section; Assistant United States
Attorney Frances S. Lewis of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section;
and Assistant United States Attorney Julia S. Choe of the Cyber and
Intellectual Property Crimes Section.
No comments:
Post a Comment