LOS ANGELES
– A member of the Big Hazard street gang was sentenced today to 156 months in
federal prison for orchestrating and executing the nighttime firebombing of
African-American families at the Ramona Gardens Housing Development in Boyle
Heights in 2014 in order to force the residents out of their homes.
Jose
Saucedo, 25, a.k.a. “Lil’ Moe,” of the Boyle Heights neighborhood of the City
of Los Angeles, was sentenced by United States District Judge Christina A.
Snyder, who described the incident as “a terribly violent crime” because the
attack targeted particularly vulnerable victims and because the defendant had a
leadership role.
Saucedo
pleaded guilty in May 2018 to four felonies: conspiracy to violate civil
rights, violent crime in aid of racketeering, interference with the Fair
Housing Act, and attempted arson of federal property.
“Racially
motivated crimes are among the most disturbing offenses inflicted on a
community,” said United States Attorney Nick Hanna. “Today’s sentence shows
that criminals who are fueled by racial hatred – such as this defendant, who
participated in a firebombing attack on innocent families while they slept –
will face severe consequences.”
“The
defendant violently attacked families sleeping peacefully in their homes,
because of their race,” said Assistant Attorney General Eric Dreiband of the
Civil Rights Division. “The Justice Department will vigorously prosecute these
acts of hate.”
“Violating
the civil rights of others by engaging in racial violence is antithetical to
our values as Americans,” said Paul Delacourt, the Assistant Director in Charge
of the FBI's Los Angeles Field Office. “The lengthy sentence handed down today
for Jose Saucedo should send a strong message that targeting innocent people
because of their skin color will not be tolerated and that offenders will spend
a significant time behind bars.”
On the
evening of May 11, 2014, which was Mother’s Day, Saucedo and seven other
members of the Big Hazard street gang agreed to firebomb several apartments in
the Ramona Gardens complex because the residents were African Americans who
lived there. Each defendant was given a specific role in the attacks and was
provided with items to be used, including masks to conceal their identities and
a hammer to break windows.
Once the
gang members located their targets, they smashed the windows of four apartments
to allow for cleaner entry of the firebombs to maximize damage and threw lit
Molotov cocktails into the residences. Three of the four targeted apartments
were occupied by African-American families, including women and children, who
were sleeping at the time of the unprovoked attack. One of the victims was a
Hispanic resident of Ramona Gardens whom the group mistakenly targeted.
Saucedo
played a primary role in the attacks, collecting glass bottles to be used as
Molotov cocktails, supervising one of the two groups of co-conspirators, and
throwing a firebomb into one of the targeted units. After the firebombing,
Saucedo continued to intimidate Ramona Gardens residents because of their race,
threatening one mixed-race family by referencing the firebombing as an example
of what would happen to them if they did not move out of the housing complex.
All seven of
the defendants who were charged in this case in 2016 have pleaded guilty to
federal hate crime and related offenses. All of those defendants also admitted
that they participated in the firebombings because of the victims’ race and
color and with the intent to force the victims to move away from the federally
funded housing complex. Saucedo, who was given four years credit for time
served on a related offense, is the first defendant in this case to be
sentenced. The other defendants will be sentenced at later dates.
The
investigation into the firebombing was conducted by agents and detectives with
the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the Los Angeles Police Department; the Los
Angeles Fire Department; and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Mack E. Jenkins, Chief of
the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section; Justice Department Trial
Attorney Julia Gegenheimer of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section; and
Assistant United States Attorney MiRi Song of the General Crimes Section.
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