Conspirators Admit Their Respective Roles In Violent Crimes
in Monterey County Jail to Maintain Discipline Of Gang Members And Punish
Transgressions of Gang Rules
SAN JOSE- Michael Rice, a/k/a Redwood, and Alberto Moreno,
a/k/a Doughboy, pleaded guilty today to racketeering conspiracy charge for
their respective roles as associates of
the Nuestra Familia prison gang, announced United States Attorney David
L. Anderson and Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent in Charge John F.
Bennett. The guilty pleas were accepted
by the Honorable Beth L. Freeman, United States District Judge.
“Defendants Rice and Moreno conspired and racketeered while
in county jail to punish gang members who did not follow gang rules,” said U.S.
Attorney Anderson. “Their conduct
underscores the risks of depending on county jails to deter and punish serious
criminal offenders. I hope and trust
that a federal sentence will send a stronger message to these and other
would-be offenders.”
“Michael Rice and Alberto Moreno have admitted today to
participating in brutally violent attacks and other crimes to further the
control and criminal activities of the Nuestra Familia prison gang,” said FBI
Special Agent in Charge Bennett. “The
FBI would like to thank our Monterey County law enforcement partners for
working with us to identify, stop, and prosecute this organized violence.”
According to the plea agreements, between December 2, 2012,
and April 14, 2014, both defendants were members of the Nuestra Familia/Salinas
Norteños Enterprise. The Enterprise
consisted of members and associates of the Nuestra Familia prison gang as well
as Norteño street gangs in Salinas, Calif., and the surrounding areas. Members and associates of the Enterprise
agreed to commit crimes such as murder, narcotics trafficking, and other acts
of violence through a pattern of racketeering activity. Norteño gang members pledge their allegiance
and loyalty to Nuestra Familia and are instructed on its rules, rituals, and
obligations. Gang rules and discipline
are maintained by assaulting and threatening those individuals who violate the
rules or pose a threat to the organization; inside prisons and local jails, all
members and associates of Nuestra Familia and Norteños work together to
maintain the structure and follow the rules of the Enterprise.
In their plea agreements, Rice, 35, and Moreno, 26, admit to
participating in the distribution of narcotics to other inmates at Monterey
County Jail. Also, the plea agreements
describe the roles of the defendants in “removals” as a means of violently
enforcing the most important of the gang’s rules while they were in the
jail. The term “removal” refers to a
violent attack designed to remove (from both the custodial housing unit and the
gang itself) a member of the gang who committed a serious violation of the
gang’s rules. A removal is accomplished
by having one or more “hitters” stab the victim and then having at least two
“bombers” assault the target by punching and kicking the victim without
weapons. The purpose of the subsequent
beating is to inflict upon the victim maximum damage while giving the hitters
time to wash themselves and get rid of weapons.
Rice admitted that in February of 2013, he was the prison gang’s
“Overall Authority” in one of Monterey County Jail’s housing units and he
consented to the removal of a gang prisoner who committed a serious violation
of gang rules. The victim was stabbed in
the head by a hitter and immediately thereafter was punched and kicked by
several bombers. Rice further admitted
that he approved the removal of another victim who was assaulted on April 29,
2013. On that day, the victim was
stabbed in the head by the hitter and then punched and kicked by several
bombers. Moreno admitted that he
participated as a bomber in the April 29, 2013, attack.
On September 27, 2018, a federal grand jury indicted Rice,
Moreno and several other defendants with racketeering conspiracy, in violation
of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). Both Rice and
Moreno also were charged with conspiracy to commit murder in aid of
racketeering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(5), and conspiracy to commit
assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering, in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1959(a)(6). Both defendants
pleaded guilty to the racketeering conspiracy charge, wherein they admitted
that murder was an object of the conspiracy.
If they comply with their plea agreements, the additional charges will
be dismissed at sentencing.
Judge Freeman scheduled defendant Moreno’s sentencing for
January 7, 2020, and defendant Rice’s sentencing for March 3, 2020. The defendants face a maximum statutory
sentence of life in prison, five years of supervised release, and a fine of
$250,000. Pursuant to their plea
agreements, defendant Rice has agreed to a sentence of 13 years and defendant
Moreno has agreed to a sentence of seven years, both subject to final approval
by the Court at their respective sentencings.
However, any sentence will be imposed by the court only after
consideration of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and the federal statute
governing the imposition of a sentence, 18 U.S.C. § 3553.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Claudia A. Quiroz and Stephen Meyer
are prosecuting the case. The
prosecution is the result of an investigation by the FBI with assistance from
the Salinas Police Department, the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office, the
California Highway Patrol, and the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation.
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