Admitted Murdering Union County Man as Part of Racketeering
Conspiracy
NEWARK, N.J. – An MS-13 member previously named one of the
FBI’s 10 Most Wanted Fugitives was sentenced today to 300 months in prison for
killing a Plainfield, New Jersey, man on behalf of the gang, and agreeing that
a conspirator would commit multiple violent acts for the gang, U.S. Attorney
Craig Carpenito announced.
Walter Yovany-Gomez, a/k/a “Cholo,” 35, who was a fugitive
residing in the Maryland/Virginia area from 2011 to 2017, previously pleaded
guilty before U.S. District Judge Stanley R. Chesler to an information charging
him with one count of racketeering conspiracy. Judge Chesler imposed the sentence
today in Newark federal court.
“This defendant committed a vicious murder and conspired
with another MS-13 member to commit further acts of violence,” U.S. Attorney
Carpenito said. “When he fled New Jersey and became a fugitive, our partners at
the FBI diligently pursued and eventually captured him. Today’s sentence
ensures that he will now remain behind bars for a substantial period of time,
thus preserving the safety of the community and punishing him appropriately for
his actions.”
“Walter Yovany-Gomez thought he could steal someone’s life
and escape unscathed. He obviously underestimated the men and women of the
FBI,” Special Agent-in-Charge Gregory W. Ehrie, FBI-Newark, said. “Members of
blood-thirsty gangs, like MS-13, who devalue life as part of their business
model, need to know that our life’s work is dedicated to keeping our citizens
safe and we won't rest until we accomplish that mission.”
According to documents filed in this and other cases and
statements made in court:
In September 2013, a Newark grand jury indicted Yovany-Gomez
for murder in aid of racketeering and conspiracy to commit murder in an
indictment that charged 14 members of Plainfield Locos Salvatrucha (PLS), a New
Jersey branch of the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) transnational gang, with various
gang-related offenses. The charges against Yovany-Gomez focused on the May 2011
murder of Julio Matute, whom law enforcement officers discovered beaten and
stabbed to death in Matute’s Plainfield apartment. Yovany-Gomez fled New Jersey
after officers went to Yovany-Gomez’s residence to question him.
In April 2017, the FBI placed Yovany-Gomez on its 10 Most
Wanted Fugitives List. On Aug. 12, 2017, he was arrested without incident in
Woodbridge, Virginia, based on tips received from the public.
Between 2014 and 2016, all 13 of Yovany-Gomez’s
co-defendants charged in the September 2013 federal indictment were convicted,
including eight MS-13 members who were convicted following a 16-week trial that
ended in June 2016.
In May 2011, MS-13 leaders, members, and associates,
including Yovany-Gomez, plotted to murder Matute, a PLS recruit, because they
believed Matute had been socializing with rival gang members.
On May 8, 2011, Yovany-Gomez and fellow MS-13 member Cruz
Flores, a/k/a “Bruja” traveled to Matute’s Plainfield apartment to carry out
the murder, meeting Matute and another individual at the residence. After
consuming alcohol and controlled substances with the other three individuals,
Matute retired to his bedroom to sleep. When Matute attempted to leave the
apartment several hours later for work, Yovany-Gomez and Flores assaulted and
killed Matute. During the attack,
Yovany-Gomez and Flores struck Matute in the head with an aluminum baseball
bat, sliced Matute’s throat with a knife, and stabbed Matute in the back 17
times with a screwdriver. Yovany-Gomez and Flores threatened to harm the
individual who witnessed the murder if that person went to the police.
Several weeks after the murder, officers went to question
Yovany-Gomez at his residence. When they knocked on his door, Yovany-Gomez
jumped out of a second-floor window and fled. PLS members and associates later
drove Yovany-Gomez to the Maryland/Virginia area so he could avoid being
arrested and prosecuted in connection with the murder. Yovany-Gomez remained in
the Maryland/Virginia area until his arrest in August 2017, adopting an alias
to further avoid law enforcement detection.
Flores was found guilty of the murder during the trial
described above.
In addition to the Matute murder, Yovany-Gomez agreed as
part of the racketeering conspiracy that another conspirator would commit
multiple acts of violence on behalf of MS-13.
In addition to the prison term, Judge Chesler sentenced
Yovany-Gomez to five years of supervised release.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents of the FBI,
under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Ehrie; and officers of U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Enforcement and Removal Operations, under
the direction Newark Field Office Director John Tsoukaris. He also thanked the
Union County Prosecutor’s Office, under the direction of Acting Prosecutor
Lyndsay V. Ruotolo, for its assistance. The FBI Washington Field Office’s
Violent Crimes Task Force, the Fairfax County Police Department’s Gang Unit,
and the Northern Virginia Gang Task Force coordinated the local search for and
arrest of Yovany-Gomez. U.S. Attorney Carpenito also acknowledged the U.S.
Attorney’s Offices for the Eastern District of Virginia and the District of
Maryland for their assistance in the ongoing investigation.
The government is represented by Senior Trial Counsel Jamari
Buxton and James Donnelly, Chief of the Violent Crimes Unit of the U.S
Attorney’s Office Criminal Division in Newark.
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